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Protests planned across Scotland as Trump visit gets under way

Protests planned across Scotland as Trump visit gets under way

STV News10 hours ago
Protests against US President Donald Trump are expected across Scotland this weekend.
Trump landed at Prestwick Airport on Friday evening for a five-day visit to Scotland. He is expected to visit both of his golf courses at Turnberry in Ayrshire and Menie in Aberdeenshire during his stay.
The occasion is officially private, rather than presidential, but Trump will hold meetings with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and First Minister John Swinney.
Police Scotland is working on the assumption there will be protests in Ayrshire, Aberdeen, Glasgow and Edinburgh.
The Stop Trump Coalition is organising events in Aberdeen city centre and outside the US consulate in Edinburgh at midday on Saturday. Similar gatherings during Trump's visit to Scotland in 2018 attracted thousands of protesters.
Along with the two main city gatherings, protests are also expected around Turnberry and Menie.
Connor Dylan, the organiser of the anti-Trump protests in Aberdeen and Edinburgh, said: 'The vast majority of people in Scotland were already opposed to everything Trump stood for when he first visited as president. As we've learned more and more about him and the way he governs, that attitude has only hardened.
'His politics – and those of the people around him – have only become more extreme since then, with once fringe ideas like mass deportations now part of mainstream American politics and being effectively exported to the UK and other European countries by far-right allies.'
According to a survey published in March, approximately 70% of Scots have an unfavourable view of Trump.
The survey by Ipsos Scotland found 71% of the 1,025 respondents questioned between February 21 and 26 held an unfavourable view of the American leader compared to 18% with a favourable view.
It also showed a gulf between Scotland and the rest of the UK, where 57% held an unfavourable view of the President and 25% a favourable one.
Trump's Turnberry hotel and golf course has at the centre of protests and vandalism.
Red paint was thrown over the Turnberry clubhouse in March while the greens were dug up and marker flags were pulled down.
The words 'Gaza is not for sale' were also sprayed across one of the course's greens.
The luxury golf resort is operated by the Trump Organisation, which is owned by the US President.
Police Scotland have charged seven people over the incident.
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