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President Trump in the UK

LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 13:  Protesters join a Women's march in central London to demonstrate against President Trump's visit to the UK, on July 13, 2018 in London, England. Tens of Thousands Of Anti-Trump protesters are expected to demonstrate in London and across the country against the UK visit by the President of the United States. Many people disagree with his policies that include migrant family separation, discrimination of transgender military personnel and changes to laws protecting women's sexual health.  (Photo by Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images)
Demonstrators gather in London for Trump visit
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Trump and May "never bonded better," source says

US President Donald Trump (L) and Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May (R) talk during a press conference following their meeting at Chequers on July 13, 2018.

President Trump and British Prime Minister Theresa May got along very well during their dinner Thursday at Blenheim Palace in the United Kingdom, a source with knowledge of the discussions told CNN. 

The two “never bonded better,” and talked almost the whole night, the source added. 

During May’s speech at dinner, Trump’s “eyes lit up” at her words and talk about the relationship between the two countries. That likely made him more amenable to apologize to May about the comments he made about May to The Sun, the source said.

The dinner took place around the same time Trump’s interview with The Sun was published.

President Trump has landed in Scotland

President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump arrive at Glasgow Prestwick Airport on July 13, 2018 in Glasgow, Scotland.

President Trump and first lady Melania Trump have arrived in Glasgow, Scotland, where they will spend the weekend at his golf club in Turnberry.

Air Force One landed at Prestwick Airport at 8:22 p.m. local time (3:22 p.m. ET).

Trump owns two high-profile courses in Scotland: the Trump International Golf Links situated amid the dunes of Aberdeen and Trump Turnberry in the southwest.

Air Force One is wheels up en route to Scotland

President Trump is on his way to Glasgow, Scotland, for the weekend.

A White House official told CNN earlier the President’s flight had been delayed because he was talking with British journalist Piers Morgan.

Some of it was a private conversation, but some of it also was an interview. 

London roads reopen after anti-Trump marches

London’s Metropolitan Police tweeted that Regent Street — one of the main streets where protesters were marching against President Trump’s UK visit — and others around the city have reopened after this morning’s rallies.

Here’s what regent street looked like this morning during the protests:

Trump will spend the weekend in Scotland

Trump and the first lady disembark Air Force One at Stansted Airport, north of London, on Thursday.

President Trump just wrapped up his two-day tour of England. Tea with the Queen was the last scheduled event.

He’ll spend the weekend in Scotland, where his mother was born. He also owns two high-profile courses in Scotland: the Trump International Golf Links situated amid the dunes of Aberdeen and Trump Turnberry in the southwest.

On Monday, President Trump will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, Finland.

The Trumps just left tea with the Queen

President Trump and first lady Melania Trump departed Windsor Castle after 48 minutes inside, CNN’s Kate Bennett reports.

The Trumps were there for tea with Queen Elizabeth II. Here’s footage of their motorcade leaving the castle:

"I really do care" shirts have made their way to London

Ann-Marie Fields, 44, attended today’s protest in London wearing a shirt that reads, “I really do care. Don’t u?” — a protest slogan that’s become popular at anti-Trump administration rallies in the US.

The shirt is a reference to the controversial jacket Melania Trump wore on the day she visited a US facility holding immigrant children separated from their families. The first lady’s Zara coat read “I really don’t care. Do u?”

In the days after Trump wore the jacket, American protesters rallying against family separations at the US border began wearing similar shirts. Many were spotting at the June 30 immigration rallies.

Trump sat in Winston Churchill's chair

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders shared a photo of President Trump sitting in former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s seat at Chequers.

Current British prime minister Theresa May hosted Trump at Chequers, the British prime minister’s country retreat, this morning. They held a bilateral meeting and then took questions at a news conference.

Trump is fond of Churchill: In 2017, he restored the bust of Churchill to the Oval Office immediately after assuming the presidency.

Here’s the photo:

How the Trumps' arrival at Windsor Castle played out

President Trump and first lady Melania Trump arrived in the Quadrangle of Windsor Castle by Range Rover promptly at 5:00 p.m. local (12 p.m. ET).

The Trumps greeted the Queen, then stood for the US National Anthem. The President and First Lady placed their hands on their hearts while the Queen held her hands and bowed her head.

The President and the Queen inspected the front rank of the Guard of Honor. The two then returned to a platform at the front as the military marched.

The Queen chatted with the President and first lady as planes were heard overhead.

Trump and the Queen chatted as they walked toward Windsor Castle, the first lady trailing closely behind. They entered the castle for tea at 5:10 p.m.

The moment President Trump met the Queen

President Trump and first lady Melania Trump just met Queen Elizabeth II at Windsor Castle for the first time.

After shaking hands, the three stood for the US National Anthem.

Queen Elizabeth is waiting for Trump to arrive

President Trump is on his way to Windsor Castle to have tea with Queen Elizabeth II

The Queen has met 10 of the 11 US Presidents since she took the throne. She met Harry Truman when she was princess in 1951.

Watch more:

While protesters rally in London, Trump supporters gather in Windsor

President Trump is on his way to Windsor Castle in Windsor, England, to meet Queen Elizabeth II.

People have lined the streets in Windsor. Several are holding signing welcoming the President.

Here's a bird's eye view of the London protests

Protesters are still marching through the streets of London to protest President Trump’s visit.

Natasha Forrester shot this video from her fourth floor office: 

What it's like in London right now

CNN reporter Betsy Klein is on Regent Street in London now, where massive anti-Trump protests are happening ahead of the President’s meeting with the Queen.

These women dressed up like handmaids to protest Trump

Some protesters in London have dressed up like handmaids from “The Handmaid’s Tale.”

Nicola Davidson, 42, and Julie Andrews, 53 (pictured above) said the world today is becoming like the Handmaid’s Tale.

“The Handmaid’s Tale” — both a 1985 book by Margaret Atwood and a Hulu TV series — takes place in a dystopia called the Republic of Gilead, a totalitarian society, formerly known as the US, where a class of women called the handmaids are subjugated and used only for reproduction.

British newspaper calls Trump's "fake news" accusations "fake news"

Britain’s The Sun newspaper is defending its reporting of a bombshell interview with President Donald Trump, not long after the President called the report “fake news.”

Here’s the statement on its website from a spokesman for The Sun:

President Trump denied earlier Friday that he criticized British Prime Minister Theresa May, the day after the British tabloid published an interview with him in which he did just that.

He dismissed the interview, conducted by a Rupert Murdoch-owned publication, as “fake news,” saying it didn’t include his comments praising May.

Trump also said Friday he apologized to May for the interview, though it appears his apology was about the paper’s omission of his comments praising her, not his criticism.

“She is a total professional because when I saw her I said, ‘I want to apologize, because I said such good things about you,’ ” Trump said.

Trump said May said, “Don’t worry, it’s only the press.”

British prime minister gave Trump chart of his Scottish heritage

British Prime Minister Theresa May gave President Trump “an illustrated ancestral chart” of his Scottish heritage, the British government said in a statement. The chart follows Trump’s lineage through his mother, who was born in 1912 on the Isle of Lewis in the Hebrides. 

The Prime Minister and her husband also gave Melania Trump a “bespoke perfume” — called The First Lady — by J Floris Ltd. It was engraved with her initials.  

Happening now: London streets are flooded with protesters

Demonstrators are protesting throughout London today as President Trump visits the country.

One group gathered outside the BBC in central London’s Portland Place at 11 a.m. local time (4 a.m. ET) for a demonstration branded “Bring the Noise,” led by the Women’s March London.

Another group pf protesters released a giant, orange-hued balloon of a “Trump Baby” in a diaper over Britain’s Houses of Parliament early Friday morning, in what organizers said was an attempt to speak to the leader “in a language that he understands, which is personal insults.”

Aerial footage and images showed London streets packed with demonstrators.

Protesters against the UK visit of Trump hold up placards as they take part in a march and rally in London

Trump heads to Scotland tonight. Here are the front pages that will greet him.

Scottish newspaper the Scotsman called Trump a “racist” and a “serial liar” in an editorial that is running during the President’s UK visit.

The editorial also pointed out Trump’s criticism of NFL players who protest the National Anthem, his claims the former President Barack Obama was not born in the US and his frequent cries of “fake news.”

“We don’t want you”

The Scotsman isn’t the only critical cover Trump could see when he lands in Scotland.

The Daily Record ran this front page today, telling President Trump: “We don’t want you.”

Trump falsely claims he predicted Brexit during Scotland visit one day after Brexit vote

Donald Trump gives a press conference on the 9th tee at his Trump Turnberry Resort on June 24, 2016 in Ayr, Scotland, one day after the Brexit referendum.

President Donald Trump again falsely claimed on Friday that he predicted the Brexit vote results ahead of the referendum during a visit to his Turnberry golf course in Scotland in 2016.

“Well, if you remember, I was opening Turnberry the day before Brexit,” Trump said, “and I said, ‘What’s going on?’ And all they wanted to talk about was Brexit and they asked for my opinion and I think you will agree that I said I think Brexit will happen. And it did happen. And then we cut the ribbon.”

What Trump actually said: The then-presumptive Republican nominee hailed the UK’s shock decision to “reassert control over their own politics, borders and economy” the day after Brexit, calling the decision of the voters “a great thing.”

“They’re angry over borders, they’re angry over people coming into the country and taking over. Nobody even knows who they are,” he said. “They’re angry about many, many things. They took back control of their country.”

GO DEEPER

A look back at Trump’s strained Twitter relationship with the UK
Embassy warns Americans to keep a ‘low profile’ during Trump visit
There’s a British campaign to make Green Day’s ‘American Idiot’ the No. 1 song when Trump arrives

GO DEEPER

A look back at Trump’s strained Twitter relationship with the UK
Embassy warns Americans to keep a ‘low profile’ during Trump visit
There’s a British campaign to make Green Day’s ‘American Idiot’ the No. 1 song when Trump arrives