US President Donald J. Trump responds to a question from the news media as he walks to board Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, USA, 08 October 2018.  EPA
US President Donald J. Trump responds to a question from the news media as he walks to board Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, USA, 08 October 2018. EPA

 

New York – A second Scottish golf resort owned by President Donald Trump posted losses last year as his company faced an anti-Trump backlash, roadblocks to expansion plans and a dip in the local economy.

A report from Britain’s Companies House shows the Trump International Golf Links near Aberdeen lost 1.3 million pounds last year ($1.6 million at current exchange rates) on a fall in revenues, adding to a string of losses at the North Sea resort in recent years. The loss was smaller than the previous year’s as the company trimmed some costs, including cutting a few jobs.

The report comes days after Trump’s Turnberry resort along the Irish Sea on the other side of Scotland posted millions of dollars losses, too.

Trump’s company blamed its Aberdeen results on a dip in the local economy, but it has struggled there for years. It lost a court fight to stop an offshore windmill farm, drew objections from environmental regulators over his development plans, fought angry homeowners who say Trump bullied them into selling to him and contended with anti-Trump protesters.

Trump’s son, Eric Trump, said in a letter accompanying the 2017 results that the resort continues to “soar” in world golf rankings, but noted it has faced setbacks.

“The crash in the oil price and economic downturn experienced in the northeast of Scotland has, however, resulted in a drop to local spending and consequently revenues have decreased by 3 percent,” he wrote.

Despite the trouble, the president’s company is planning a major development at the resort. In July, his company submitted plans to local Scottish officials to spend nearly 150 million pounds ($196 million) building The Trump Estate, a residential community of 500 luxury cottages and mansions.

The expansion at would include plans for construction of retail space, equestrian and sports centers and 50 “hotel” cottages. If it gets government approval, the company expects to break ground early next year.

Ethics lawyers have said that any expansion there requiring government review raises the possibility Trump’s business could get special favors as the U.K. begins tricky negotiations with the U.S. on a post-Brexit trade deal.

The Trump International Golf Links, ranked 64 in Golf Digest’s best courses, overlooks a North Sea coastline famed for dramatic, fragile sand dunes stretching into the horizon.

Some locals praise the Trump resort for bringing tourists to the area and helping with other local businesses, but other are angry at the U.S. president and have protested during his visits. Citing Trump’s comments about Muslims during the campaign, the Scottish government stripped Trump’s honorary title as business ambassador for Scotland, and an honorary degree from local university was revoked.

As reported by Vos Iz Neias