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US President Barack Obama, center left, and his wife first lady Michelle Obama, center right, pose with Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, left, and Prince Phillip in the Oak room at Windsor Castle ahead of a private lunch hosted by the Queen. (Source: AP)
Bearing a gift and birthday greetings, President Barack Obama on Friday celebrated Queen Elizabeth II over lunch at Windsor Castle, going the extra mile for a monarch he’s expressed a special affection for over his tenure.
First lady Michelle Obama flew in from Washington to join her husband for a series of royal engagements that make up the centerpiece of the president’s valedictory trip to London. The two are also slated to dine with the queen’s grandsons later in the day.
Britain’s oldest and longest-serving monarch, who celebrated her 90th birthday a day earlier, put a scarf over her head and came out in a light, drizzling rain to greet the president and first lady as their helicopter landed on the lush green lawn outside the castle.
The couples shook hands warmly before hopping into a black Range Rover, driven by Prince Philip, to head back to the castle. Obama sat in front with Philip, the queen and the first lady in the back seat.
President Barack Obama and Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron wave from the steps of 10 Downing Street, London before a meeting Friday, April, 22, 2016. (AP Photo/ Frank Augstein)
A few minutes later, the queen led the four into a sitting room with a roaring fire, and asked the president where he’d like to sit. The four posed for pictures before the private lunch. The queen was dressed in a light blue suit; the first lady wore an Oscar de la Renta print dress and a black Narciso Rodriguez coat.
Barack Obama brought a gift: A photo album of the queen’s many visits with US president and first ladies. The album begins with her visit to the United States in 1951. Then known as Princess Elizabeth, Duchess of Edinburgh, she toured George Washington’s Mount Vernon Estate and met with President Harry Truman at the White House.
Later, Obama planned to have dinner with Prince William, his wife Kate and brother Prince Harry at the younger royals’ Kensington Palace home in central London. William is second in line to inherit the British throne after his father, Prince Charles.
Obama was breaking up his royal holiday with a stop at 10 Downing St. for talks with Prime Minister David Cameron about the multinational campaign against the Islamic State group, as well as counter-terrorism efforts, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, the global economy, Russia’s stance toward Ukraine and other issues
Political issues in the United Kingdom and the US, including Britain’s possible exit from the European Union, or Brexit, are on the agenda, along with the US presidential campaign that will determine Obama’s successor.
Cameron is leading the campaign in favor of Britain’s continued membership in the 28-nation EU, which Obama also supports. He wants Obama to speak out against severing ties, but voters will have the final say in a June 23 referendum. Cameron faces opposition from within his own Conservative government and widespread skepticism among voters about the benefits of staying in the EU. Backers of those who support Britain’s exit, meanwhile, have accused Obama of hypocrisy and interference.
In an opinion piece published online Thursday by the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Obama urges Britons to stay in the EU. He notes the decision will affect US interests and says “The US and the world need your outsized influence to continue – including within Europe.”
Another issue that could come up is Obama’s criticism of Cameron in an interview published recently in The Atlantic magazine. In the article, Obama faulted Cameron and other European allies for shortcomings in their handling of Libya after the 2011 toppling of leader Moammar Gadhafi. Obama said Cameron had become “distracted” by other issues.
Libya has since descended into chaos and become a haven for members of the Islamic State group.
Obama’s lunch with the queen is the latest in a series of engagements between the two families since he took office in 2009.
“Each time, the president has come away with an even deeper personal affection for her,” said Obama spokesman Josh Earnest. “She is an important symbol of a country with whom the United States has a special relationship. But she also is a human being whose charisma and a sense of nobility and honor is something that I think people around the world are attracted to.”
Obama described the queen as “delightful” following their first meeting in 2009. He also told an aide that she reminded him of his grandmother.
That meeting is also where the queen and the much-taller Mrs. Obama showed how quickly they took a liking to each other by briefly standing arm in arm at a Buckingham Palace reception for world leaders attending an economic summit in London. The queen strayed from protocol by wrapping an arm around the first lady, who reciprocated.
A palace spokesman at the time described the scene at the ladies’ first meeting as a “mutual and spontaneous display of affection.”
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