In pictures: The Palace of Versailles, Macron’s beloved soft power tool
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In pictures: The Palace of Versailles, Macron’s beloved soft power tool
French President Emmanuel Macron plays host to President Donald Trump at a lavish dinner Wednesday night at the Palace of Versailles to celebrate the 250th anniversary of American independence. This is the fourth time the French leader has chosen Louis XIV’s sumptuous palace as a venue to entertain a visiting foreign head of state. Here’s a look back at previous receptions.

Emmanuel Macron is pulling out all the stops to keep Donald Trump in France during the G7 summit. The French president’s statement on Monday acknowledged that he had invited his US counterpart to dinner on Wednesday evening at the Palace of Versailles to keep him there until the end of the G7 summit currently underway in Evian-les-Bains.
“Why did we want this dinner? It’s not a gala dinner or anything like that. No, it’s a dinner to celebrate the 250th anniversary of American independence, because France played a role in it,” the French president said in an interview with TF1 before the opening of the G7 summit, which runs through Wednesday.
“It will be our moment to celebrate this friendship” between the two countries, he added, noting that he himself would not be traveling to the US for the July 4 Independence Day celebrations.
Macron also noted that Trump had left “in the middle” of last year’s G7 summit in Canada. This time, “he needs to stay until the end to work out the agreements, because we also have important discussions on digital technology and artificial intelligence on Wednesday,” he said, painting the dinner in Versailles as a way to keep him in France.
The choice of the Palace of Versailles was made to appeal to Trump, who is a fan of lavish settings but who is not particularly fond of large multilateral gatherings. He will be welcomed there by his French counterpart a few hours after the G7 summit concludes.
Macron has already hosted three heads of state at Versailles since the beginning of his first terms in 2017: Russian President Vladimir Putin, then-future Emperor of Japan, Naruhito, and King Charles III of the United Kingdom. Here’s a look back at these three receptions in pictures.
Vladimir Putin, received on May 29, 2017:





Naruhito, received on September 12, 2018:





King Charles III, received on September 20, 2023:





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