[ad_1]
Meghan Markle will not join her husband, Prince Harry, for a private luncheon hosted by Queen Elizabeth II to welcome US President Donald Trump on his first official visit to the UK this month next, announced Saturday the Buckingham Palace. The 37-year-old royal, who gave birth to the couple's first baby, Archie, earlier this month, will not join the rest of the royal family in a series of events that will unfold during of the three-day visit starting June 3rd. The Duchess of Susbad, during As an American actress, she portrayed Trump as being "misogynistic" and "divisive" in an interview given to a US television show in 2016.
The Queen will be accompanied by his son Prince of Wales, Prince Charles and his wife. Camilla for the official welcome of Trump and his wife Melania the day of their arrival. A welcome ceremony will be held in the palace garden on the first day of the visit, instead of the usual Horse Guards parade venue in Whitehall, London. The decision is probably due to security issues.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, Prince William and Kate Middleton, will join Queen, Charles and Camilla for a lavish state banquet in the Ballroom of Buckingham Palace. Personalities of British national life and prominent British Americans will be present. The American president will also have tea with the heir to the throne and his wife on the first day. The second day, he will meet Theresa May, just days before his resignation as Prime Minister.
They will jointly organize a working breakfast in which the Duke of York will participate in the Palace of St. James. Trump will then travel to Downing Street to meet with the Prime Minister, followed by a joint press conference. That evening, he will host a dinner back at Winfield House, the residence of the United States Ambbadador, to which Charles and Camilla will participate on behalf of the Queen.
The Queen and Charles will participate in the national commemorative ceremony of the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landing at Southsea Common, Portsmouth, on June 5th. More than 300 D-Day veterans will participate in the ceremony, telling the story of D-Day through musical performances, testimonial readings and military demonstrations, including an overview of 25 modern and historic aircraft.
Trump reportedly took his adult children with him on his visit to the United Kingdom – his daughter Ivanka and her husband, Jared Kushner, both advisers to the president, as well as her siblings Tiffany Trump, Donald Trump Jr and Eric Trump. May welcomed this opportunity as an opportunity for the United Kingdom and the United States to "strengthen our already close relationship" when the state visit was announced in April. The White House said it "would reaffirm the unshakeable and privileged relationship" between the two countries.
Source link