DONALD Trump is reportedly set to visit Oxfordshire as part of a three-day 'Best of British' tour. 

The US president will dine at Blenheim Palace, Winston Churchill's birthplace, on the evening of Thursday, July, 12, according to national reports

With large protests planned against the controversial leader, Mr Trump will be kept out of central London for the majority of his stay with Oxfordshire pencilled in as one stop on a nationwide tour. 

After rumours of the planned visit began circulating, anti-Trump campaigners have already pledged to protest. 

Oxford West and Abingdon MP Layla Moran said she would protest at the palace instead of attending a rally in central London planned for July 13.

The Oxford Stand Up To Trump Coalition also discussed the possibility of the president being in the county at a meeting last week and said it would organise a demonstration if the dinner goes ahead. 

The president's advisers are due to visit the UK shortly to decide the details of the three day trip, the first he has made since being elected in November 2016. 

After leaving Oxfordshire, he will hold talks with Theresa May at the Prime Minister's country retreat, Chequers, before meeting the Queen at Windsor Castle.

Reports suggest Mr Trump may require 10,000 police officers drafted in to protect him from mass protests and the threat of a terror attack. 

At a meeting of the police and crime panel meeting on Friday, Thames Valley police and crime commissioner Anthony Stansfeld said he had not yet been given the detail of the Presidential visit. 

He said further information would be provided shortly about the trip and discussed the prospect of applying to the Home Office for extra funding for policing such an occasion.

Mr Stansfeld was responding to a question posed by Tom Hayes, Oxford City Council’s lead on community safety and a member of the panel.

Mr Hayes had said: “Are you not concerned this will lead to significant protest? A lot of people are concerned about community safety given the things the president says.

“Have you made representations to the Government about perhaps him not coming here?”

Thames Valley Police and the office of the police and crime commissioner have been contacted for further comment.