Some U.K. leaders does not want to see Trump visiting.
Following anti-Trump protests all over Britain, a former head of the Foreign Office has urged the government to delay a state visit offered to the US President - saying it would put Queen Elizabeth in a “very difficult position”.
In a letter to the Times newspaper, Lord Ricketts said it was unprecedented for a US president to receive such an invitation in their first year in office.
Permanent Secretary at the Foreign Office between 2006 and 2010, he urged Prime Minister Theresa May to “move fast” to protect the Queen from further controversy.
Outrage is growing over Trump’s immigration crackdown with tens of thousands of protesters gathering in London and other British cities on Monday night to demonstrate against the ban and planned state visit. Some held placards reading “No to Racism, No to Trump” and “Dump Trump”.
“I think it is wonderful that so many people have actually come together to voice their disgust as regards to what Donald Trump has done recently,” said one man demonstrating in the capital.
“We don’t agree with what Donald Trump is doing and we won’t stand for it,” a young woman said.
Thousands of people have demonstrated across Britain in protest at US President Donald Trump's immigration ban.
A petition demanding the invitation be withdrawn has gathered more than 1.6 million signatures. It says the state visit, marked by pomp and pageantry, would cause embarrassment for Queen Elizabeth.
Critics of this view argue that the monarch has hosted many controversial figures over the years, from Chinese Presidents to the late Saudi King Abdullah.
More than 100,000 signatures have been added to a rival petition urging that Trump’s state visit be allowed to go ahead. Any petition gathering more than 100,000 signatures is considered for parliamentary debate in the UK.
The invitation for a state visit was conveyed by British Prime Minister Theresa May last week when she visited Trump in the White House.
As Britain prepares to leave the EU, May is eager to maintain the UK’s so-called ‘special relationship’ with the US and secure a trade deal with Washington.
Trump’s directive put a 120-day hold on allowing refugees into the US, an indefinite ban on refugees from Syria and a 90-day bar on citizens from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen.
Britain’s Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has described the restrictions as “highly controversial”.
“This is, of course, a highly controversial policy, which has caused unease and, I repeat, this is not an approach that this government would take,” Johnson told parliament on Monday.