Trump Scraps U.K. Trip, Citing Obama Embassy Deal Begun by Bush
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President ‘not a big fan’ of embassy’s new south London home
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May’s office hits back, praises ‘vibrant’ district of Vauxhall

President Donald Trump has ditched plans to visit London next month to open a new U.S. embassy, in a decision that’s put fresh strain on the so-called “special relationship” with the U.K.
“Reason I canceled my trip to London is that I am not a big fan of the Obama administration having sold perhaps the best located and finest embassy in London for ‘peanuts,’ only to build a new one in an off location for $1.2 billion,” Trump said on Twitter. “Bad deal. Wanted me to cut ribbon -- NO!”
Prime Minister Theresa May’s office hit back at Trump’s unflattering portrait of the new home for the embassy, in the area of Vauxhall, south of the river Thames. “Vauxhall is a vibrant and important part of London and home to many businesses,” May’s spokesman Max Blain told reporters on Friday. May’s former chief of staff Nick Timothy suggested the president should try visiting a famous gay bar in the area.
Trump Might Just Have a Point on Timing of London Embassy Sale
British officials said the U.K. government had been working on the basis that Trump would arrive in late February, though no firm date had been set. The U.K.’s official invitation to Trump for a full “state visit” still stands, Blain said.
Strained Relationship
Relations between the U.S. and its closest ally have been tested repeatedly since Trump took office a year ago. May’s invitation for Trump to visit the Queen has faced growing opposition, fueled in part by the president’s Twitter criticism of London Mayor Sadiq Khan and retweets of propaganda from a far-right British anti-Muslim group.
Khan said Trump “would without doubt have been met by mass peaceful protests” if he hadn’t canceled the trip. “It appears that President Trump got the message.”
British opposition politicians said Trump was not welcome in the U.K. Former opposition Labour party leader leader Ed Miliband tweeted to Trump that the reason he canceled was really “because nobody wanted you to come. And you got the message.”
Wedding Snub
Farage, who was the first British politician to meet Trump after his election victory, suggested political opposition to Trump’s views may have played a part. “It’s disappointing,” Farage told BBC Radio’s Today program on Friday. It’s possible that plans for “mass protests, those optics he didn’t like the look of.”
Another explanation could be reports that Trump isn’t happy because he may not be invited to the forthcoming wedding of British royal Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. The prince is on friendly terms with former President Barack Obama, who U.K. media have suggested will be invited.
“Who his Royal Highness Prince Harry and Miss Markle invite to their wedding is really a matter for them,” said senior Conservative Party lawmaker Tom Tugendhat. Foreign heads of state should not automatically expect an invitation to the wedding, he added.
The government played down the impact of the president’s decision on long-term collaboration. “The U.S. is one of our oldest and most valued allies and our strong partnership will endure,” May’s spokesman Blain said. But Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson criticized Khan, saying the opposition Labour party “seem determined to put this crucial relationship at risk.”
Trump’s move was reported late Thursday by the U.K.’s Daily Mail newspaper. It said some officials believed he chose not to come because he felt the arrangements for the visit were too low key, and would instead send Secretary of State Rex Tillerson to open the embassy.
While the sale of the embassy was made under Obama’s watch, the decision to relocate the embassy was made under George W. Bush in 2008.
The new site on the south bank of the river Thames near to the Palace of Westminster had been scheduled to open during Obama’s term, but delays pushed back its formal opening until this year. The State Department agreed to sell the existing embassy building on Grosvenor Square, Mayfair, to Qatari Diar Real Estate Investment Co. in 2009 to fund the relocation. The investors have sought approval to turn the building into a hotel, according to the project’s website.
— With assistance by Andy Sharp, and Alex Morales