LONDON (AP) 鈥 After the pomp, it鈥檚 time for the politics.
will meet on Thursday, the final day of the U.S. leader’s to Britain, with tech investment, steel tariffs and potentially tricky topics on the agenda.
The president and first lady Melania Trump were feted by and Queen Camilla on Wednesday at Windsor Castle with the monarchy can muster: gold-trimmed carriages, scarlet-clad soldiers, artillery salutes and a glittering banquet in a grand ceremonial hall.
British officials have festooned the trip with the kind of superlatives Trump revels in: It’s an 鈥渦nprecedented鈥 second state visit for the U.S. leader, featuring the biggest military honor guard ever assembled for such an occasion.
On Thursday it is Starmer鈥檚 turn to welcome the president to Chequers, a 16th-century manor house northwest of London that serves as a rural retreat for British leaders.
Trump鈥檚 British hosts want to celebrate the strength of the U.S-U.K. relationship, almost 250 years after its rocky start in 1776. Trump will be welcomed by ceremonial honor guard complete with bagpipers 鈥 a nod to the president鈥檚 Scottish heritage 鈥 and shown items from the archive of wartime leader Winston Churchill, who coined the term 鈥渟pecial relationship鈥 for the bond between the U.S. and Britain.
There鈥檚 also a lunch of Dover sole followed by key lime pie, and a display by the Red Devils army parachute team.
Trans-Atlantic tech partnership
The two leaders are expected to sign a 鈥渢ech prosperity deal鈥 that U.K. officials say will bring thousands of jobs and billions in investment in artificial intelligence, quantum computing and nuclear energy.
It includes a U.K. arm of Stargate, a Trump-backed AI infrastructure project led by OpenAI, and a host of AI data centers around the U.K. American firms are announcing 31 billion pounds ($42 billion) investment in the U.K.鈥檚 AI sector, including $30 billion from Microsoft for protects including Britain鈥檚 largest supercomputer.
British officials say they have not agreed to scrap a digital services tax or water down internet regulation to get the deal, some details of which have yet to be announced.
The British government is learning that when it comes to deals with the U.S. administration, the devil is in the detail. In May, Starmer and Trump struck a trade agreement that reduced U.S. tariffs on Britain鈥檚 key auto and aerospace industries.
But talks on slashing duties on steel and aluminum to zero from their current level of 25% have stalled, despite a promise in May that the issue would be settled within weeks.
The British Chambers of Commerce said failure to cut the tariffs would 鈥済reeted with dismay鈥 by the British steel industry.
Potentially awkward conversations
Starmer wants a successful state visit to balance weeks of bad news that saw him lose not just an ambassador but Deputy Prime Minister 鈥 who quit over a tax error on a home purchase 鈥 and a senior aide. Fourteen months after winning a landslide election victory, Starmer鈥檚 government is struggling to kickstart Britains鈥 sluggish economy and his Labour Party is lagging in the polls.
Leslie Vinjamuri, president of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, said the trip was likely to be 鈥渁 difficult visit for the prime minister, much more so than for the U.S. president.鈥
For Trump, 鈥渢his plays well at home, it plays well abroad. It鈥檚 almost entirely to President Trump鈥檚 advantage to turn up to Britain and be celebrated by the British establishment,鈥 she said.
Starmer will be bracing for awkward questions about when he and Trump hold a press conference at Chequers. Days before the state visit, Starmer Peter Mandelson, over the envoy鈥檚 past friendship with the convicted sex offender.
Questions about Epstein overshadowed Trump’s last visit to the U.K. in July, when he sat with Starmer at his golf club in Scotland. As they took questions from journalists, Trump was repeatedly peppered with queries about Epstein as his government faced pressure from back home to release government records into the criminal case of the now-disgraced financier, who authorities say killed himself in 2019.
Difficult discussions on Ukraine, Middle East
There are also potentially difficult conversations to be had over and the
Starmer has played a major part in European efforts to shore up U.S. support for Ukraine. Trump has expressed frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin but has not made good on threats to impose new sanctions on Russia for shunning peace negotiations. He has repeatedly pushed off a decision, suggesting more than once that action will come in a few weeks. As he left Washington for the U.K. on Tuesday, Trump appeared to put the onus on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, saying, 鈥淗e’s going to have to make a deal.鈥
Last week鈥檚 Russian drew strong condemnation from European NATO allies, and pledges of more planes and troops for the bloc鈥檚 eastern flank. Trump played down the incident鈥檚 severity, musing that it 鈥 鈥
Starmer also departs from Trump over Israel鈥檚 war in Gaza, and has said the U.K. will formally at the United Nations later this month.
Trump has threatened to penalize Canada during trade negotiations for making a similar move.
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AP Technology Writer Matt O鈥橞rien contributed to this story.