Conservative leadership hopeful Sajid Javid has revealed he does not know why he was not invited to the state dinner with US President Donald Trump earlier this month.

The home secretary described it as "odd" that he was not asked to attend the Buckingham Palace banquet, which was attended by other cabinet ministers such as Chancellor Philip Hammond and Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt.

Mr Javid suggested his office had asked Downing Street for an invite, but had been turned down.

A Downing Street source told Sky News they can "definitively rule out" that Mr Javid's non-attendance was anything to do with his Muslim background, or his previous criticism of Mr Trump.

In 2017, after Mr Trump promoted Twitter posts by far-right group Britain First, Mr Javid tweeted: "So POTUS has endorsed the views of a vile, hate-filled racist organisation that hates me and people like me.


"He is wrong and I refuse to let it go and say nothing."

Asked by BBC Radio 4's Today programme why he was not invited to the Buckingham Palace dinner with Mr Trump, Mr Javid said: "I don't know. I don't know. I've asked but I've just been told normally home secretaries aren't invited so, I don't know."

Image: Home Secretary Sajid Javid was not invited to the Buckingham Palace event

After his tweet criticising Mr Trump was quoted back to him, Mr Javid was asked how he felt about not being invited.

"I don't like it. I think for the reason that you've just said, it is odd," he added.

"My office did ask Number 10 and they said 'no', so you'd have to ask someone from Number 10 why they made that decision."

So POTUS has endorsed the views of a vile, hate-filled racist organisation that hates me and people like me. He is wrong and I refuse to let it go and say nothing — Sajid Javid (@sajidjavid) November 29, 2017

But the home secretary insisted he is "not saying" his Muslim background was behind the decision not to invite him.

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Tory MP Julian Knight claimed there would be "no excuses" if Mr Javid had been "snubbed" over the state banquet.

He called for a "full public statement" and "timeline explanation" to be issued.

Downing Street said there was only a "limited number" of places available for ministers at the state banquet.

The prime minister's official spokesman said that a "large number" of ministers had expressed a wish to attend but were unable to do so.

"This was a state banquet hosted by Her Majesty the Queen so I don't think it is appropriate to discuss in public who did or did not ask to attend," he said

"As with any state banquet only a limited number of places are available to the government.

"A large number of ministers who expressed a wish to attend were not able to do so."

Image: Chancellor Philip Hammond was among cabinet ministers who did attend the banquet

The spokesman also rejected a suggestion from ex-Tory chairman Baroness Warsi that "Islamophobia" was behind Mr Javid's non-invitation.

He said: "Categorically untrue. The prime minister is proud to have appointed Sajid Javid as the country's first Muslim home secretary."

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In response to Mr Javid's radio interview, Baroness Warsi tweeted: "To use my own phrase from 2011:

'Islamophobia has passed the dinner table test'."

A spokesperson for the Muslim Council of Britain said: "It is concerning that whilst former home secretaries Amber Rudd and Jacqui Smith have confirmed they attended all state dinners during their tenure, Sajid Javid was excluded from the state dinner despite the attendance of three more junior ministers.

"This - whilst the president is well renowned for Islamophobia, and for sharing racist views.

"We hope that there is clarification to categorically confirm whether the president's team formally or informally requested his exclusion."

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On the eve of his visit to the UK earlier this month, Mr Trump branded London mayor Sadiq Khan - a critic of the US president - a "stone cold loser".

Mr Trump added Mr Khan, a practising Muslim, has "done a terrible job as mayor of London, has been foolishly 'nasty' to the visiting President of the United States".

Mr Javid officially launched his campaign for the Conservative Party leadership on Wednesday as he called for a "new kind of leadership and a new kind of leader".

However, he faces an uphill battle in his bid to be prime minister, with only 19 Tory MPs having so far publicly declared their support for him.