PROTESTERS in London are preparing to once again unleash the Donald Trump baby blimp as the US president’s three-day state visit enters its second day.

The 20ft inflatable caricature first appeared during Trump’s previous visit to the UK and will be flown above Westminster later today.

A 16ft talking robot of Trump sitting on a gold toilet is also expected to make an appearance.

Supporters of Human Rights charity Amnesty will also unfurl five giant banners from Vauxhall Bridge, facing the US embassy, saying “Resist sexism”, “Resist racism”, “Resist hate”, “Resist cruelty” and “Resist Trump”.

Kate Allen, Amnesty International UK section’s director, said: “Trump has presided over two-and-a-half years of utterly shameful policies.

“Locking up child migrants, imposing a discriminatory travel ban, decimating global funding for women’s rights and withdrawing from global human rights bodies – it’s been a roll call of shame under Donald Trump’s presidency.”

In an interview following his visit to the UK last summer, the president expressed that he was made to feel unwelcome by the blimp and confirmed that it had put him off spending more time in the English capital.

Trump, his wife Melania and four of their five children are in the UK after being invited for a state visit. They touched down in London yesterday morning before meeting with the Queen. They were then given a tour of Westminster Abbey before dining on Windsor lamb and strawberry sable at the Queen’s state banquet.

Trump is not expected to come to Scotland during his visit, but that did not stop protests from taking place. On Sunday evening, ahead of Trump’s arrival, Extinction Rebellion Glasgow staged a protest at his Turnberry golf course in Ayrshire.

The group followed that up by staging a protest at the top of Buchanan Street in Glasgow.

Jeremy Corbyn is expected to lead the London protests and will join thousands on the streets later today.

The Labour leader will attend and speak at the demonstration on the day the US president was due to meet Theresa May for talks.

Corbyn said the protest was “an opportunity to stand in solidarity with those he’s attacked in America, around the world and in our own country”.

The Labour leader’s attendance at the rally follows his decision to boycott last night’s state banquet.

Corbyn has accused Trump of an “entirely unacceptable interference in our country’s democracy” after his eve-of-visit endorsement of Boris Johnson and praise for Nigel Farage.

The president used a Sunday Times interview to say he would have “to know” Corbyn before authorising the sharing of highly sensitive US intelligence with a future Labour administration.

He also urged the Labour leader to “get along with the United States” if he wanted Britain to continue to benefit from US military and intelligence support.

It comes after the US president fired a Twitter broadside at Labour’s Mayor of London Sadiq Khan, as he was arriving in the UK.

Minutes before he touched down, Trump used Twitter to brand Khan a “stone cold loser” before turning his attention to China and CNN.

Once again a huge police and security operation is in place for the visit, which cost more than

£14 million when the president visited the UK last July.

The Metropolitan Police said it had “a very experienced command team” leading the operation as the force geared up to deal with the visit itself and expected protests.

Last year, almost 10,000 officers were deployed for Trump’s trip to the UK, with nearly every force in the country providing staff to support the operation.