ondon (CNN)For Donald Trump, in politics as in life, it seems the only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about.
But Monday, the Republican presidential candidate will enter unfamiliar territory, even by his larger-than-life standards, when members of the British Parliament hold a debate over a petition calling for the U.S. businessman-turned-politician to be banned from the country.
The debate, which will be held in the UK Parliament's Westminster Hall at 4.30 p.m. local time (11.30 a.m. ET), is a result of a petition that Scottish freelance journalist and activist Suzanne Kelly launched last month to block the former reality TV star from British shores.
The petition, which calls for the 69-year-old to be barred because of his "hate speech" after his calls for a travel ban on Muslims entering the United States, has received more than 574,000 signatures.
UK lawmakers to debate banning Donald Trump 03:06
The unconventional debate is unlikely to result in any such action, however. No vote will be held at the end of the debate, and politicians are expected to treat it more as an opportunity to air their views on the divisive Republican under the protection of parliamentary privilege, which legally shields them from accusations of defamation or slander.
Members of Parliament will also debate a counter-petition that calls for Trump not to be banned from the country.
"Leave the decision making on appropriate responses to the Americans. (Let's) mind our own business," reads the petition, launched by David Gladwin, which has received more than 40,000 signatures.
Read more: Could the UK really ban Trump?
Cameron opposes ban
Cameron: 'Trump would unite us all against him' 02:30
People who have been barred previously include Quran-burning U.S. pastor Terry Jones, a Hamas lawmaker and a former Ku Klux Klan leader.
Donald Trump debate: Could UK really ban him?
British Prime Minister David Cameron has already said he is not in favor of any ban on Trump.
In comments to Parliament last month, Cameron said that Trump's proposal for a temporary ban on Muslims from entering the United States for security was "divisive, stupid and wrong," but that a British ban on Trump in response was unnecessary.
"If he came to visit our country, I think he would unite us all against him," he said.
Frosty response to remarks in Britain
Trump's remarks on Islam after last month's San Bernardino, California, terror attack -- including the claim that parts of London were so radicalized that British police feared for their lives -- struck a nerve in the UK, drawing condemnation from a range of public figures.
London Mayor Boris Johnson labeled them "complete and utter nonsense," adding that "the only reason I wouldn't go to some parts of New York is the real risk of meeting Donald Trump."
Salmond: Trump 'a three time loser' 02:00
The university had been pressured by another petition launched by Kelly, author of the one to ban Trump from the UK, calling on it to revoke the honorary degree.
Kelly had previously campaigned against the development of the Trump International Golf Links, a high-end golf resort in Aberdeen, Scotland, which repeatedly has brought the billionaire into conflict with locals.
Last month, Britain's Supreme Court unanimously knocked back Trump's appeal against a wind farm being built overlooking the golf course, which he argued would be a blight on the coastal landscape.