BFF-12,13 Trump in Scotland on next leg of contentious UK trip

268

ZCZC

BFF-12,13

BRITAIN-US-DIPLOMACY-WRAP

Trump in Scotland on next leg of contentious UK trip

TURNBERRY, United Kingdom, July 14, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – US President Donald
Trump wraps up a four-day visit to Britain, dominated by his blasting of
Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit strategy, by spending the weekend in
Scotland.

Trump is staying at one of his luxury golf resorts in Turnberry, southwest
of Glasgow, in a private part of the trip before heading for a summit with
Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki.

Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, a fierce critic of Trump, has
refused to meet him and he was instead met at Glasgow airport by a British
government representative.

A major anti-Trump rally is planned in Edinburgh on Saturday after a mass
protest in London Friday that organisers said drew more than 250,000 people.

A pro-Trump demonstration is also due to be held in London by alt-right
campaigners, as well as a counter, anti-fascism protest.

In an extraordinary interview with Friday’s edition of The Sun tabloid,
Britain’s most widely read newspaper, Trump said May’s plan for post-Brexit
ties with the EU would “probably kill” prospects for a UK-US trade deal.

He also said former foreign minister Boris Johnson, who resigned over the
plan earlier this week and is a potential challenger to May, would make “a
great prime minister”.

Trump said he had advised May to take a different strategy on Brexit,
telling the paper: “I would have done it much differently. I actually told
Theresa May how to do it but she didn’t agree, she didn’t listen to me”.

The unprecedented criticism comes at a particularly sensitive time for May,
who is facing a rebellion by Brexit hardliners against her proposals to
retain strong trading ties with the EU even after Britain leaves the bloc.

MORE/MR/ 1104 hrs

ZCZC

BFF-13

BRITAIN-US-DIPLOMACY-WRAP-TWO-LAST

After meeting May at her Chequers country retreat outside London on Friday,
Trump sounded more conciliatory, saying that bilateral relations “have never
been stronger”.

“Whatever you do is okay with us, just make sure we can trade together,
that’s all that matters,” he told May.

“The United States looks forward to finalising a great bilateral trade
deal,” he said, and repeatedly praised May’s leadership, saying she was a
“terrific woman”.

– ‘Global Scot’ –

Trump is staying at the Turnberry golf resort — the same course he
inaugurated on June 24, 2016, a day after the referendum in which Britain
voted to leave the EU. Discord over his other golf course in Scotland dating
back over a decade means there is little love lost between Trump and the pro-
independence government in Scotland.

In 2006, the billionaire real estate tycoon bought 1,400 acres (567
hectares) of land near Aberdeen and promised to build “the world’s best golf
course”.

The proposal was welcomed by the government at the time and Trump was named
a “Global Scot” business ambassador.

But local councillors rejected the plan amid fierce opposition from
conservationists and neighbouring residents.

The SNP government overturned the councillors’ decision shortly after golf-
loving nationalist Alex Salmond took control, kicking off a short and
tempestuous bromance with Trump who called Salmond “an amazing man”.

However, the relationship cooled when Trump’s promise to create 6,000 jobs
and invest o1 billion failed to materialise, and Trump began interfering with
the SNP’s flagship plan to make Scotland a renewable energy powerhouse.

The Trump Organisation has spent around o100 million on the course, known
as Trump International Golf Links, and employed around 650 temporary and
permanent staff — but the company insists the resort remains a work in
progress.

– ‘I am the evidence’ – Three years later Trump visited the Scottish
Parliament to complain about plans to build 11 “ugly” offshore wind turbines
near his newly minted Aberdeenshire resort, insisting the development would
do “terrible damage” to Scottish tourism. Trump declared “I am the evidence”
when Scottish lawmakers asked him to back up his assertion that the wind farm
would “destroy the financial wellbeing of Scotland”.

Sturgeon, who rescinded Trump’s “Global Scot” title after he pledged to cut
Muslim immigration into the United States, switched on the first wind turbine
last week.

“A famous golf course owner from America who, I think, has now turned his
hand to politics, decided to take the Scottish government to court to try to
block these wind turbines,” she told reporters.

“The Scottish government beat that American golf course owner in court…
and these amazing wind turbines generated their first electricity,” she said.

BSS/AFP/MR/ 1104 hrs