Trump arrives in Scotland, hails British exit from EU
AYRSHIRE, Scotland (AP) – Presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump, visiting Scotland the day after the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union, hailed the move, saying voters “took back their country.”
Trump, whose own campaign shares some of the same populist national themes that fueled the vote to leave the EU, said Friday that “all over the world, people are angry.”
“They’re angry over borders, they’re angry over people coming into the country and taking over, nobody even knows who they are,” said Trump at the ceremony to mark the reopening of a golf resort he owns on Scotland’s west coast. “They’re angry about many, many things.”
Trump, whose visit to Scotland is his first international trip since sealing sufficient delegate support to be the GOP standardbearer this fall, also predicted that other nations will follow the United Kingdom’s lead.
“This will not be the last,” he said.
In a statement his campaign released a short time later, Trump linked the vote to his own White House bid, declaring that “come November, the American people will have a chance to re-declare their independence.”
Trump, who called the vote “historic” and “a great thing,” said earlier this week that he hadn’t closely followed the so-called Brexit vote but he had come out in support of the “Leave” movement.
He did not comment immediately about the resignation of British Prime Minister David Cameron, who had advocated for the UK to stay in the EU and announced earlier Friday that he would step down by this fall. The referendum to leave, which passed with nearly 52% of the vote, immediately rattled the rest of Europe, sending markets plunging.
Trump’s reason for his trip to Europe wasn’t politics, but rather to check on a pair of championship-level golf resorts he owns in Scotland. Trump, who unlike previous presidential candidates did not schedule any political meetings while abroad, spent Friday morning marking the $200 million-plus rehabilitation of the famed Turnberry golf resort nestled on the rocky coast facing the North Atlantic Ocean.
Trump arrived at Turnberry, which has hosted four British Opens and was used an as Air Force base during both world wars, on a helicopter and then toured the grounds. He is slated to hold a press conference later on the green of the 9th hole.
Trump, whose mother was born in Scotland, has long emphasized his ties to the country, but he has waged several battles with those in his ancestral homeland. Earlier this year, he was stripped of an honorary degree from Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen.
Trump was initially welcomed by Scottish leaders. But relationships soured as arguments ensued over a nearby wind farm and the levels of investment promised. Trump feared the wind farm would block the view from his course. He claimed he had received assurances that it would not be built. Trump denounced a leading Scottish politician, Alex Salmond, as “an embarrassment to Scotland.”
Trump also faced opposition from environmental groups concerned about development on Aberdeen’s famed dunes, and some local people refused to make way for the development.
Trump’s Scotland sojourn sparked worries from some Republicans at home in the United States who believe the trip was poorly timed. It comes as Trump has slipped in the polls and just days after he dismissed his campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, and reported having just $1.3 million in cash on hand at the start of June, more than $41 million behind presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
Trump’s son, Eric, who oversaw the work at Turnberry, dismissed talk that the family’s business was distracting his father, saying “the eyes of the world” will be on Trump.
“The Turnberry course is one of the crown jewels of the golf world and is now one of the crown jewels of our family’s properties,” Eric Trump said this week in an interview with The Associated Press. “It’s a brief but important visit and then he will be back on the campaign trail.”