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Who is Queen Máxima of Netherlands, who wowed in lime-green welcoming Trump, world leaders to NATO summit

She stole the limelight.

Queen Máxima of the Netherlands turned heads in a striking lime-green jumpsuit as she and hubby King Willem-Alexander gave President Trump and fellow world leaders a royal welcome at the NATO summit.

The Dutch royal couple beamed as they greeted world leaders from 32 countries – including Trump, French President Emmanuel Macron, and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer – at The Hague’s World Forum, marking the first time the Netherlands has played host to a NATO summit.

On Tuesday, the fashion-forward Argentinian-born Queen, 54, upstaged some of the world’s most powerful figures, dazzling in the show-stopping, draped ensemble during the summit’s family photo.

Group photo of NATO leaders with the King and Queen of the Netherlands at a summit. REUTERS

The mother of three, celebrated for her vibrant fashion sense, is a former New York City investment banker who was once dubbed Europe’s “most interesting” royal.

Máxima met her future husband, then-Crown Prince Willem-Alexander, at a party in Spain in 1999 while working as an economist at Deutsche Bank in the Big Apple — and the two quickly fell in love.

But their courtship hit a rough patch when Dutch media revealed that Máxima’s father had served as a minister for Argentina’s brutal military junta government during the country’s infamous Dirty War.

President Trump greeted by the Dutch Royal Family. / SplashNews.com
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen shaking hands with Queen Maxima of the Netherlands. AP

Former Queen Beatrix, who had faced controversy over marrying a former member of the Hitler Youth, gave her eldest son’s marriage her blessing, praising Máxima as an “intelligent, modern woman.”

The King, 58, ascended to the throne in 2013, a year after the couple wed, with his Dutch Queen quickly gaining popularity for her charisma, smart wit, and strong work ethic.

Widely regarded as a fashion icon, Maxima is equally known for her substance, never shying away from tough political issues like immigration, and earning praise an early advocated for LGBTQ+ rights.

The queen stole the show in her bright outfit. REUTERS

The royal pair are regarded for their casual approach to monarch life, opting out of coronation ceremony and choosing to send their three daughters — Princess Catharina-Amalia, 21, Princess Alexia, 19, and Princess Ariane, 18 — to public school, rather than an elite private institution.

Catharina-Amalia, who is known as Princess of Orange, is heir to the Dutch throne.

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