Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla arrive to attend the Royal Maundy service at St. Asaph Cathedral, marking only the second time in its history that this ancient Christian ceremony is held in Wales, Britain, April 2, 2026. REUTERS/Phil Noble Image:Reuters/Phil Noble

King Charles' visit to U.S. to proceed after Washington shooting

by · Japan Today

LONDON — King Charles' state visit to the United States will go ahead as planned ‌on Monday despite a shooting at a White House dinner attended by President Donald Trump, Buckingham Palace said after discussions with U.S. officials.

Charles and his wife, Queen ‌Camilla, are due to arrive on Monday for a ⁠four-day state visit, but questions arose after a man ⁠opened fire ⁠on security personnel near the White House Correspondents' Association dinner on ‌Saturday, prompting Secret Service agents to rush Trump from the venue.

U.S. authorities believe ⁠the shooting likely targeted ⁠the president and administration officials, acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche said.

Blanche also said he was confident Charles would be safe during this week's visit to the U.S.

The four-day trip — which is to include a ⁠private meeting with Trump and an address to Congress marking ⁠250 years since U.S. independence — is ‌intended to reinforce the strained U.S.-British relationship amid differences over the Iran war.

"Following discussions on both sides of the Atlantic through the day, and acting on advice of ‌government, we can confirm the state visit by their majesties will proceed as planned," a Buckingham Palace spokesperson said.

"The king and queen are most grateful to all those who have worked at pace to ensure this remains the case and are looking forward to the visit getting underway tomorrow."

A palace source said there might be small operational changes ​to one or two engagements.

Earlier, the spokesperson said Charles was being kept fully informed of developments and was relieved that Trump, ‌his wife and all guests had been unharmed.

Charles and Camilla have also privately reached out to Trump and his wife - first lady Melania Trump - to express their sympathies, ‌a palace source said.

British senior minister Darren Jones said earlier on ⁠Sunday that the government would ⁠continue to cooperate closely with U.S. security ​services ahead of Charles' visit and that extensive discussions ⁠already under way would ‌continue in the coming days.

"In respect of His Majesty's ​visit to the United States next week ... our security services obviously remain in close cooperation in advance of that," Jones told Sky News.

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