BRITISH PM Theresa May will this week urge Donald Trump to avoid central London protesters and meet her at her country residence instead.

Britain’s ambassador to Washington DC, Sir Kim Darroch, will present the PM’s plan to the White House for the US President’s first visit to Britain in July.

As well as keeping him away from Downing Street, No10 will also propose he takes tea with the Queen in Windsor Castle instead of Buckingham Palace, reports The Sun.

It is hoped the American leader will not be able to resist being snapped at the site where Prince Harry married Meghan Markle on May 19.

A third out-of-town attraction is also being lined up to entertain Mr Trump — a visit to his hero Winston Churchill’s birthplace, Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire.

The president has told Mrs May he wants to pay homage to the legendary World War II Prime Minister during his three day visit to Britain.

It comes as Mr Trump sent out a tweet for Memorial Day in the US, which commemorates fallen soldiers.

Before laying a wreath at Arlington National Cemetery, Mr Trump tweeted that “those who died for our great country would be very happy and proud at how well our country is doing today”.

Meanwhile, thousands of protesters have vowed to take to London’s streets if Mr Trump comes to the nation’s capital, potentially plunging the visit into a diplomatic disaster.

The trip — from July 12-14 — is seen by Downing Street as very high stakes, as upsetting the volatile property billionaire could lead to another setback in the PM’s strained relations with him.

Chequers, Windsor Castle and Blenheim Palace are all on large estates where protesters can be kept away.

All three locations are also west of London, and a short hop from each other in the President’s Marine One helicopter.

A senior British government source told The Sun: “Two proposals are going to be put to the White House by Sir Kim with the PM’s approval — one for a Downing street visit, and one to base it around Chequers.

“We have full programs for both, but it will be made very clear that we would very much prefer it if the president chooses the Chequers option.”

Talks at the PM’s country retreat in the Buckinghamshire countryside will be sold to Mr Trump as one of the most “presidential” things he could do while in the UK.

A host of US presidents have been there, from Dwight D. Eisenhower to Richard Nixon and George W. Bush, as well as other world dignitaries, including Russian leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

A military component to Mr Trump’s visit to cement the Transatlantic security alliance is also being planned for the Friday, after dinner with Mrs May on Thursday night and a round of golf in Scotland with a celebrity on Saturday.

It is expected to involve a joint inspection with the PM of the RAF’s brand new US-made F-35B Lightning jets, or a visit to the giant new HMS Queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier, moored in Portsmouth.

An earlier plan for her to take him to GCHQ’s famous “doughnut” HQ in Cheltenham has now been scrapped.

Diplomats feared it would draw too much attention to his false accusations against the eavesdropping intelligence agency last year, when he accused it of tapping his phone calls during the US presidential campaign on President Obama’s request.

Mr Trump cancelled a planned visit to London to open the new US embassy in February this year, complaining its move to south of the Thames had been a “bad deal”.

But critics said his decision was driven by a fear of protests after he retweeted race hate videos by far right group Britain First.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan, who has fought a running feud with Mr Trump, told him he will see that “Londoners hold their liberal values of freedom of speech very dear” if he comes to the capital.