A mere day after accepting an official invitation from the Queen to make a state visit to the United Kingdom in June, President Donald Trump couldn’t help but prove why he has a reputation for being a bad guest. After Larry Johnson, a former C.I.A. analyst, appeared on the conservative One America News Network Wednesday and made claims about the British intelligence service and the 2016 election, Trump’s Twitter fingers were burning. He couldn’t help but regurgitate the already-litigated and disproven idea that he was wiretapped and spied on by the British government during the 2016 election:

Maybe he was in a salty mood because he found out there probably wouldn’t be an actual palace for him to stay at while in London. After the invitation’s acceptance was announced, the Daily Mail reported that, despite receiving the Queen’s invitation, Trump and his wife, Melania, would likely not be staying in Buckingham Palace, as her guests usually do. The part of the palace where the aides of foreign dignitaries usually stay, the East Wing, will be closed as part of the 10-year, £365 million renovation of the palace. Instead, they will likely stay at the U.S. ambassador’s residence, Winfield House, where they stayed during Trump’s working visit to the country last summer. It’s probably a coincidence that the renovation will affect that specific wing on those specific dates, but it will at least allow the Queen to keep the Trumps at arm’s length if she so chooses.

Trump is no stranger to a chilly reception in the United Kingdom. His first bid for a state visit was delayed last year, due in part to fears about demonstrations; when Trump finally made it to London in July 2018, he was greeted by tens of thousands of protestors. They followed his every move, even showing up to his Scotland golf course, Trump Turnberry.

Now, protesters are already announcing their intentions for the June visit. After the visit was officially announced, CNN contacted organizers of last year’s London protests and confirmed that the big Trump baby blimp that drew headlines would return for another go-around.

“I mean, it doesn’t take a crystal ball for people to predict there will be protests,” said London’s mayor, Sadiq Khan, to the BBC Tuesday. “Many of the things that this president has said, people find objectionable.”

The visit is set to occur in time for ceremonies recognizing the 75th anniversary of D-Day. Trump will attend a ceremony in Portsmouth before heading to Normandy for a larger memorial. During the visit, he is also going to conduct bilateral talks with Theresa May, whose handling of Brexit he criticized a day before a meeting with her last summer. That is, should he make it to the visit this time. It’s going to be a long month.