President Donald Trump arrived at the official London residence of the British Prime Minister Tuesday morning, ready for an afternoon of political talks and a visit to the Foreign Office buildings next door.

The President and First Lady arrived at Downing Street by motorcade a little after 11 AM Tuesday morning and were greeted by British Prime Minister Theresa May and her husband Philip. Posing for photographs in front of the comparatively modest front door of the 10 Downing Street residence of the Prime Minister, the group then went inside to embark on talks.

The official timetable of Tuesday’s events issued by the White House states the President took part in expanded bilateral talks with Theresa May and other British political figures, and afterwards the pair are due to have a working lunch.

During the President’s walk around of Downing Street, the Prime Minister showed him an original copy of the American Declaration of Independence that is owned by the British government. The display of this artefact follows the President seeing the Congressional Medal of Honour the United States Awarded to the Unknown Warrior in 1920, a symbolic representation of British war dead of the 1914-1918 First World War, and a display of Anglo-American historic pieces presented at Buckingham Palace on Monday.

Britain’s BBC reports President Trump’s comments from the morning meetings, where he talked up the trade deals that could be done between the United Kingdom and the United States. He told Theresa May during the meeting: “I think we will have a very, very substantial trade deal.

“This is something you want to do and my folks want to do… Stick around. Let’s do this deal.”

This afternoon, the President will leave Downing Street to visit the Churchill War Rooms — the underground command bunker in the heart of the British government’s Westminster complex of buildings used by wartime leader Winston Churchill.