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Later on Monday, Trump is scheduled to attend an official welcome ceremony and private lunch with the queen, followed by a tour of Westminster Abbey, tea with the Prince Charles and his wife, Camilla, and an evening banquet at Buckingham Palace with the queen and other members of the British elite.

On Tuesday, Trump plans to hold meetings with May, who is stepping down as Conservative leader later this week after failing to gain support for her Brexit plan.

Despite the standard itinerary, Trump’s visit is shaping up to be unlike any other by an American leader.

On Tuesday, tens of thousands of protesters are expected to pack London’s Trafalgar Square. A blimp showing Trump as a diaper-clad baby will take flight and hover above the scene.

“This is about sending a strong message that people in the U.K. don’t accept the divisive right-wing policies that Trump stands for, and that inviting him for a state visit is totally inappropriate,” the Stop Trump Coalition said in a statement. Another group, Stand Up To Trump, is also organizing the protests.

Photo by Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg

The protests risk taking more of the shine off the so-called special relationship between the two allies. Last July, Trump told The Sun newspaper that while he used to love London, the balloon and the protests — organizers estimated 250,000 people took to the streets — didn’t make him “feel welcome.”

Trump is likely to be even more exposed to the protests this time. He’ll spend two days in central London, unlike last year when he largely avoided the city.