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MAGA, Mamdani and the king. The political undertones to Charles' visit

MAGA, Mamdani and the king. The political undertones to Charles' visit

Nicole Fallert, USA TODAYTue, April 28, 2026 at 10:30 AM UTC

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LONDON− King Charles III isn't an elected politician. But his trip to the United States has political implications.

But the monarch's state visit to the U.S. to mark the nation's 250th birthday comes as extreme political movements are on the rise back home, echoing political divisions facing Americans and placing a spotlight on the U.K.'s relationship with President Donald Trump.

Reform UK, a far-right political party, and the Green Party, a far-left liberal party, lead ahead of May 7 elections across the United Kingdom, according to recent Ipsos UK polling asking who citizens expect to win. Meanwhile, voters expect the mainstream Labour and Conservative parties to see losses, the polling suggests. And April 2026 opinion polling by Ipsos in the U.K. shows Reform UK in the lead, with 25% of voters saying they intend to vote for the far-right party and 17% saying they will vote Green.

These fresher, more extreme parties aren't officially linked to any U.S. political movements, but there are parallels in their origin stories.

"They have similar domestic causes," Tony Travers, associate dean of the School of Public Policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science, told USA TODAY, naming high living costs and concerns about immigration as key factors. "It's a turbulent time for U.K. government."

Here's the state of play in U.K. politics ahead of the king's visit and why it matters for Americans.

The state of play in UK politics

Increasingly sharp political divides backdrop the king's visit to the U.S. The liberal Labour Party currently holds power in Parliament, but is increasingly unpopular, according to David Dunn, professor of International Politics at the University of Birmingham.

Living costs have continued to rise, while U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is in a fragile position as he's criticized for broken campaign promises, such as reversing a pledge to abolish tuition fees for students, Dunn explains. He's also come under fire for his pick of U.S. ambassador, who was removed from office and arrested due to ties to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.

"The anti-incumbency trend means a willingness to deviate away from the two main parties," Dunn says. "There's a fracturing in British politics."

Demonstrators carry cutouts depicting U.S. President Donald Trump and Britain's Reform UK leader Nigel Farage as they gather prior to a march against far-right extremism from Park Lane to Trafalgar Square, organised by the Together Alliance, a coalition of unions and civil society groups, in London, Britain, March 28, 2026.MAGA and Reform UK are 'similar but different,' expert says

From frustration with the major parties in the U.K. has risen more hard-liner coalitions pitching themselves as change-makers.

In the same way Make American Great Again was born from the Republican party, Reform UK broke away from the traditional Conservative Party, Dunn says. Reform UK echoes the driving forces behind the MAGA in that it promotes an immigration crackdown and blasts the incumbent government for failing on affordability.

Reform UK, like MAGA, also has a highly charismatic leader in Nigel Farage, who, like Trump, touts a radical shift from status quo and identifies as a leader who comes from outside the political establishment, Dunn explains.

Reform UK Leader Nigel Farage speaks during a press conference on migration policy on April 20, 2026 in the Westminster area of London, England.

"The same way you understand where MAGA came from, you can understand where Reform came from," he says. "By promising everything opposite all at once, (Farage) can build a coalition that gets support."

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Reform UK is "similar but different," to MAGA, Travers says. Reform UK is distinctly secular while Christian nationalist values underpin MAGA, Travers says. And its causes are centered around definitively U.K. concerns, specifically the economic aftermath of the U.K.'s referendum to leave the European Union in 2016.

And Reform UK has also worked to carve its own image separate from Trump, Travers says.

"Farage has sought distance from Trump ... Trump doesn't play well in British politics," Travers says. "Even though Reform has similar concerns to those who vote MAGA."

Far-left chases Mamdani's success

While Reform and MAGA aren't exact counterparts, the Green Party, a far-left party also emerging in the U.K., is set on mimicking the successful progressive campaign of newly-inaugurated New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, Travers says. He says the Greens, led by London Assembly member Zack Polanski, sees Mamdani as a "hero."

Zack Polanski, Leader of the Green Party, visits Levenshulme High Street for a local election campaign event on April 23, 2026 in Manchester, England.

"Polanski wants to follow the Mamdani path to garner votes," Travers says. For liberals who see Labour as too soft on progressive causes, the Green Party is a popular new route that aims to deliver on unemployment for young people and increase public funding for health care.

"Polanski wants to follow the Mamdani path," Travers says.

Leader of the Green Party of England and Wales Zack Polanski speaks during an election press conference with the co-leaders of the Scottish Green Party at Novotel on April 24, 2026 in Glasgow, Scotland.The king is 'lower case political'

Charles' visit also comes amid declining popularity of Trump among British people, Dunn says. The president's forging of war in Iran has driven up global oil prices, while his tariff policies continue to increase costs for British people. And tensions worsen over U.S. use of British air bases for the war in the Middle East, he says.

"He's something that does not fit well with the British people," Dunn says. Some may want the king to avoid the president. Others may see the king's role as something beyond current political rife, he says.

"If they see Charles meeting with Trump, or the Chinese president, people in the U.K. know this is part of a diplomatic magic ... to smooth over diplomatic cracks," Travers says.

The king is not an elected official and does not have political power. Meeting with Trump doesn't indicate any political attitude from the king either way, Dunn says. It's part of Charles' job description as a ceremonial figure to represent his country and keep political beliefs inside − something his mother modeled with presidents across the political spectrum, Travers says.

"What's being celebrated here is the wider relationship and the bigger picture rather than the individual people," Dunn says.

But he is head of state of Canada, Australia and the U.K., which are key members of international alliances with the U.S. His mission will be to remind Trump of the symbolic value of these relationships at a time when global security hangs in the balance, according to experts.

"The stakes are so high," Travers says. "The future of NATO, peace in Europe, peace in the Middle East are all in some extent in King Charles' hands ... reinforced by the fact the U.K. government is in such a weak domestic position at the moment ... He's 'lower-case p' political."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: King Charles’ US visit comes as a MAGA-esque movement rises back home

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