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King Charles gives Trump a shiny gift as they share jokes and bond over ‘special relationship’ at White House state dinner

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President Donald Trump is a well-known fan of gold — but he might find an old hunk of brass he received from King Charles III on Tuesday to be just as precious as that precious metal.

The King, who returned to the White House Tuesday evening for a state dinner to cap off his two-day visit to Washington, gifted the American president with a Second World War-era submarine’s bell, polished to a mirror shine, which had once been part of a British submarine that spent more than 20 years in Australia when the Royal Navy maintained a permanent presence there.

The boat’s name? H.M.S. Trump.

Charles presented Trump with the relic of his Royal Navy namesake as he delivered a toast in which he said he hoped it would “stand as a testimony to our nation’s shared history and shining future.”

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“And should you ever need to get hold of us, just give us a ring,” he said.

Britain’s King Charles points at the bell he presented to U.S. President Donald Trump as a gift during a state dinner at the White House. The bell is from former Royal Navy submarine HMS Trump. (Reuters)

The King also thanked Trump for his “generous hospitality” during what he said was his 20th visit to the United States — his first as the British sovereign — as he delivered a lighthearted toast in which he noted the construction site on which Trump hopes to build his controversial $400 million ballroom after demolishing the historic East Wing of the White House last year.

Charles acknowledged that he could not “help but notice the readjustments to the East Wing” as he left Trump’s guests laughing with his wry observation that the British had “made our own small attempt at real estate redevelopment of the White House” when troops under the command of Major-General Robert Ross set it ablaze in 1814.

The King’s visit to Washington has followed a period of tensions between his Labour Party-led government and the Trump administration over the U.S.-Israeli bombing campaign against Iran after the British government declined to participate in the unprovoked war, leading Trump to attack Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer as “no Winston Churchill” and slam the NATO alliance as a “paper tiger.”

In what appeared to be a backhanded acknowledgment of the transatlantic dispute, Charles noted that Trump had recently accused Europe of being insufficiently grateful for America’s role in defeating Nazism during the Second World War in remarks at the World Economic Forum when he said European leaders would “all be speaking German and a little Japanese” were it not for America.

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U.S. President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump welcome Britain’s King Charles and Queen Camilla (not pictured) at the South Portico as they arrive for a state dinner at the White House in Washington, D.C. (Reuters)

But the King turned the tension into fodder for yet another laugh line when he pointed out that the British control of most of North America prior to the late 1700s had prevented Britain’s rival kingdom — France — from gaining purchase in what is now the U.S. and most of Canada.

“Indeed, you recently commented, Mr. President, that if it were not for the United States, European countries would be speaking German. Dare I say that if it wasn’t for us, you’d be speaking French,” he said, drawing yet more laughs from guests in the jam-packed East Room.

“American leadership helped rebuild a shattered continent, playing a decisive role as a defender of freedom in Europe. We and I shall never forget that,” the King added.

The white-tie state dinner hosted by Trump came just hours after Charles used a historic address to the U.S. Congress to offer a subtle but stinging rebuke of Trump’s often-monarchical ambitions — hailing the “separation of powers” that ensured the new union would not wind up with another king lording over the unified colonies all those centuries ago.

Britain’s King Charles speaks during a state dinner for him and Queen Camilla at the White House in Washington, D.C., (Reuters)

Speaking before a rare joint meeting of Congress on the second day of his and Queen Camilla’s state visit to Washington, the king had both Democrats and Republicans leaping to their feet, clapping and loudly cheering in response to his thinly disguised critique of the current president veiled in a historical description of the American constitutional system, lauding the foundation of the republic as part of a “great inheritance” passed down from the United Kingdom to the United States.

“Our common ideals were not only crucial for liberty and equality, they are also the foundation of our shared prosperity. The Rule of Law: the certainty of stable and accessible rules, an independent judiciary resolving disputes and delivering impartial justice,” he said.

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He added that the “bitter divisions of 250 years ago” had given way to “a friendship that has grown into one of the most consequential Alliances in human history.”

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