When the boss of the United States Secret Service stands in front of cameras to declare that their “multilayered protection works” mere hours after a man with a shotgun and multiple knives sprinted past his agents at a black-tie dinner the president was attending, you know things are going about as well as… well, as well as a Hegseth Signal chat.
And now Buckingham Palace is publicly conceding (per Newsweek) that it might have to rethink its approach to King Charles and Queen Camilla’s upcoming state visit to the United States.
The royal pair are landing in Washington on Monday for a four-day visit, timed to the 250th anniversary of they of American independence.
That visit was already scrutinized due to the strained relationship between Trump and Keir Starmer’s government, but this Saturday night, it became a security issue as well when an armed assailant breached the White House Correspondents’ Dinner at the Washington Hilton.
His Majesty, a palace spokesman told GB News, is “greatly relieved” no one was hurt. Then comes the operative line: “a number of discussions will be taking place throughout the day to discuss with US colleagues and our respective teams to what degree the events of Saturday evening may or may not impact on the operational planning for the Visit.”
Ah, to translate, slightly de-courtierified: we’re not sure if your security agencies are up to the task of running a banquet that doesn’t double as a live-fire exercise.
Buckingham Palace might be worried about the king’s safety
Just last week, Director Sean Curran confessed the Secret Service is “not adequately staffed to handle the demands of the upcoming FIFA World Cup, the 2028 Olympics and the 2028 presidential cycle.” Forty-eight hours later, his agents were exchanging fire with a 31-year-old in a hotel lobby that hosted the president, his entire cabinet, and roughly half the cable news.
Now, per this new report by TheSun, Shadow home secretary Chris Philp has demanded the visit be “urgently reviewed” on security grounds.
This is the second time an assailant comes close to Trump in the past two months alone, the other incident coming on February 22, when 21-year-old Austin Tucker Martin drove through the north gate of Mar-a-Lago carrying a shotgun and a gas can. Trump was at Washington on that particular day, but that still doesn’t change the fact that the Secret Service is always playing catch-up with these threats as opposed to preventing them.
Fingers crossed, Charles will pack something a little sturdier than a top hat.
Published: Apr 26, 2026 04:51 pm