**FILE** Donald Trump (Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons)
**FILE** Donald Trump (Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons)

President Donald Trump has voiced support for the United States to become an โ€œassociate memberโ€ of the British Commonwealth, saying heโ€™s on board if King Charles extends the offer. 

The presidentโ€™s statement came in response to a report in The Sun that claimed the British monarch might make such a proposal during Trumpโ€™s upcoming state visit to the United Kingdom.

โ€œI Love King Charles. Sounds good to me,โ€ Trump posted on his Truth Social platform.

The Sun report referenced a so-called โ€œsecret offerโ€ said to be in development, a follow-up to a Daily Mail story suggesting that discussions are underway โ€œat the highest levelsโ€ to include the United States in the Commonwealth of Nations.

While the British government said any decision would rest with Buckingham Palace, officials under Britainโ€™s Labour government have looked at the royal family as a diplomatic bridge to Trump, who has often praised the monarchy.

The proposal โ€” if true โ€” immediately triggered concerns across the political and social spectrum in the U.S., given the countryโ€™s historical split from British rule and the continuing impact of that colonial relationship, particularly on communities of color.

More than two centuries ago, the American colonies broke away from Great Britain to gain self-rule after years of subjugation under the monarchy. The Declaration of Independence, adopted on July 4, 1776, was a rejection of British control, high taxation without representation, and the forced quartering of British soldiers in colonistsโ€™ homes. The founding document declared that all people have the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness โ€” an ideal contradicted by the simultaneous enslavement of African people that Britain helped perpetuate through its transatlantic slave trade.

British economic power in the 1600s and 1700s was built on its vast naval control and the establishment of global trade networks, many of which relied on enslaved labor. In the Caribbean and on the east coast of North America, enslaved Africans worked plantations producing sugar cane, tobacco, and other commodities that fueled Englandโ€™s growth.

Trumpโ€™s recent policies and public statements have only added to the alarm surrounding a symbolic return to Britainโ€™s fold. Since taking office, he has signed unprecedented executive ordersโ€”many of which aim to erase federally supported programs promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). His administration has also attempted to restrict birthright citizenship and ramp up deportation efforts.

Those actions have reignited comparisons to Americaโ€™s Jim Crow era, which saw legalized racial segregation and voter suppression tactics across the South. 

Following the end of slavery in the 1800s, some African Americans briefly gained political ground. Still, by 1877, reactionary lawmakers had implemented laws and violence to push them back into second-class citizenship.

Margaret Huang, president and CEO of the Southern Poverty Law Center, said recent attacks on DEI efforts are โ€œjust a sanitized substitute for the racist comments that can no longer be spoken openly.โ€ 

She and other civil rights leaders argue that the broader agenda aims to redefine who is considered a legitimate American and who deserves the federal governmentโ€™s protection.

Trumpโ€™s public desire to annex Canada, whose new prime minister, Mark Carney, recently met with King Charles, is expected to be a central theme of any conversations. Canada has been a Commonwealth member since 1931.ย 

Founded in 1926, the Commonwealth of Nations today includes 56 member states, most of which are former colonies of the British Empire.

The idea of the United States, born out of revolution and resistance to monarchy, now potentially aligning itself with the very institution it once fought to escape, has left critics with one lingering question: How far is too far?

โ€œThis isnโ€™t about diplomacy or nostalgia,โ€ one political historian remarked. โ€œItโ€™s about rewriting the meaning of American independence.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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1 Comment

  1. Was a red blooded MAGA supporter. What is he thinking? returning the United States of America back to being a subject of the British crown? If Charles is King of the United States too, what does that make Trump? a stool boy to the King?

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