A Farewell Fit for a King — President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump Bid a Magnificent Goodbye to King Charles III and Queen Camilla at the White House
There are farewells and then there are farewells — and the one that unfolded on the South Portico of the White House on the bright and glorious morning of Thursday the 30th of April 2026 was, without question, one of the most triumphant, warm and genuinely joyful conclusions to a royal state visit that the world has ever witnessed. For four extraordinary days, the United States of America had opened its arms, its institutions, its grandest rooms and its most sacred places to King Charles III and Queen Camilla — and what had been offered in return was something that no protocol could have scripted and no official programme could have guaranteed: a reception of such authentic, unstinting and overwhelming generosity that it will be spoken of with pride and affection on both sides of the Atlantic for generations to come.
At the very heart of that generosity stood President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump — and as the two couples came together one final time on the South Portico for the formal farewell that would bring this most historic of state visits to its magnificent close, the warmth and the genuine affection between them was as vivid and as real as it had been on that very first sunlit afternoon four days earlier. As King Charles and Queen Camilla stepped from their car, President Trump was there to greet them with the easy, natural warmth that had defined his hospitality throughout — offering a cheerful good morning to the assembled press as the four of them stood together for photographs before heading inside the White House for one final, private time together. It was an entirely fitting coda to a visit built as much on genuine human connection as on the grandeur of state ceremony.
When the two couples re-emerged into the April sunshine for their final goodbyes, the moment was simple, warm and deeply felt. President Trump and King Charles shook hands with the firm, affectionate grip of two men who have shared something genuinely remarkable across four extraordinary days — and as the royal motorcade finally pulled away from the White House and disappeared from view, the President turned to the assembled reporters and offered perhaps the most perfectly unscripted tribute of the entire visit. Great people, he said simply, we need more people like that in our country. In those few words, delivered with characteristic directness and complete sincerity, President Trump captured something that all the formal communiqués and official statements of the week could not have expressed more powerfully — the profound and personal impression that King Charles III and Queen Camilla had made upon everyone they encountered throughout this most triumphant of royal tours.
It was a visit that had begun with the thunder of a 21-gun salute and the immaculate precision of a full military honour guard, and that had filled its four magnificent days with moments that will live forever in the memory of all who witnessed them. King Charles had delivered an historic address to a joint session of Congress, becoming only the second British monarch ever to do so, navigating the full complexity of the transatlantic relationship with the wit, wisdom and grace that are entirely and wonderfully his own. Together, he and Queen Camilla had stood in solemn and deeply personal reverence at the National September 11 Memorial, honouring the fallen and embracing the survivors and first responders with a tenderness and humanity that moved New York City to its core. They had celebrated literature and learning, championed the vulnerable and the overlooked, walked the streets of Harlem and the hills of the Shenandoah Valley, and brought the joyful spirit of the Crown to every corner of this great nation they had been privileged to visit.
From the very first moments of this, the first state visit to the United States by a reigning British monarch since his beloved late mother Queen Elizabeth II — who herself made four historic state visits to America during her magnificent reign — King Charles III has demonstrated with quiet, unwavering brilliance exactly what it means to be a royal diplomat of the very highest order. And the hospitality extended to him and to Queen Camilla by President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump — bold, generous, personal, magnificent and delivered with a warmth and sincerity that went far beyond the requirements of protocol — will stand as one of the great acts of transatlantic friendship in the long and storied history of the Special Relationship. Great people indeed — and a visit, in every conceivable and glorious sense, worthy of the ages.
