Trump back on the golf course for day two of Scottish visit

Mary McCool
BBC Scotland News
Donald Trump is back out on the golf course on the second full day of his visit to Scotland before he meets the EU Commission president for trade talks.
Despite showery conditions, the US president is playing another round at Turnberry in South Ayrshire with guests and family, including his son Eric.
A small group of pro-Trump protesters gathered in the grounds of the resort with a placard which read “President Trump don’t trust Starmer”.
It is believed Trump’s only major business meeting on Sunday will be with Ursula von der Leyen, who has said they will discuss “transatlantic trade relations, and how we can keep them strong”.
Reuters
PA Media
Von der Leyen met with First Minister John Swinney on Saturday and thanked him for a “warm welcome in Scotland” in a post on Instagram.
Trump is expected to meet UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer on Monday and Swinney on Tuesday, as well as opening a second 18-hole course at his estate in Aberdeenshire.
He is currently making his way around the Turnberry golf course, followed by around two dozen buggies, many of which are carrying bodyguards and other staff.
Three pro-Trump demonstrators are watching from the beach, carrying signs with derogatory messages about the UK prime minister Sir Keir Starmer.
As Trump passed by, they shouted “we love you Trump,” while the BBC’s Scotland editor James Cook asked the president if he had finalised a trade deal with the European Union.
The resort is ringed by dozens of police officers and a steel fence.
EPA
Trump is due to meet Von der Leyen later to discuss a possible trade deal between the EU and the United States.
Minutes after arriving in Scotland on Friday, Trump talked about the potential for a deal, telling reporters there was a 50-50 chance of reaching an agreement.
Brussels, he claimed, wanted to “make a deal very badly”.
Senior EU officials are also sounding positive about the prospect of establishing at least the framework of a pact.
If the talks collapse though the result could be a trade war — with Trump threatening 30% tariffs on EU goods — and the EU promising to respond in kind.
European Commission’s Audiovisual Service
The president arrived in Scotland on Friday evening, with Air Force One touching down at Glasgow Prestwick Airport before his entourage travelled to nearby Turnberry.
He told the press “it’s great to be in Scotland” and praised Starmer and Swinney ahead of meeting them.
A major security operation was ramped up at Turnberry before Trump played 18 holes on Saturday.
He waved to photographers and the assembled media as his day passed without incident.
Several roads remain closed in the area while police and military personnel have been carrying out checks around the resort.
A security checkpoint has been put in place outside the hotel and a large fence has been erected around the course.
Hundreds of anti-Trump protesters gathered in Aberdeen and Edinburgh to demonstrate their frustrations towards the president’s politics – including his views on climate change and his position on the conflict between Israel and Gaza.
Trump is expected to meet Starmer on Monday before officially opening his new golf course at Menie in Aberdeenshire.
The US has a blanket 10% tariff on imports from countries around the world. In May, Starmer struck a deal with the president to reduce tariffs on some British goods entering the US and it is expected their discussions will centre on this subject.
Meanwhile Swinney has said a meeting with Trump would present an opportunity to “essentially speak out for Scotland” on issues such as trade and the increase of business from the United States in Scotland.
The first minister said he would also raise “significant international issues” including “the awfulness of the situation in Gaza”.
Trump will travel back to Washington on Tuesday and is due to return to the UK for an official state visit in September.