Trump could meet King Charles in Scotland to plan state visit

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Trump could meet King Charles in Scotland to plan state visit

US President Donald Trump has been invited to meet King Charles in Scotland to discuss an unprecedented second state visit to the UK. Prime Ministe

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US President Donald Trump has been invited to meet King Charles in Scotland to discuss an unprecedented second state visit to the UK.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer used a trip to the White House on Thursday to present the president with an official letter from the monarch offering a meeting at either Dumfries House or Balmoral Castle to discuss the logistics.

A meeting in Scotland would be Trump’s first return to the country, where he has family and business connections, since 2023.

The Scottish government said First Minister John Swinney, who endorsed rival Kamala Harris in last year’s election, would work to “strengthen” ties between the two countries.

Trump was hosted by the late Queen Elizabeth for a three-day state visit during his first presidential term in 2019.

Second term US presidents are traditionally not offered state visits and have instead been invited for tea or lunch with the monarch, usually at Windsor Castle.

But King Charles’ letter proposed a meeting in Scotland, where Trump owns two golf courses, to discuss arrangements for a second state visit.

The letter suggested meeting at either Dumfries House in Ayrshire, which the King has owned since 2007, or Balmoral Castle in Aberdeenshire, an official residence of the Royal Family.

Trump appeared taken aback by the letter, but after taking a minute to read it he said he accepted the invite and that it would be an “honour” to visit the “fantastic” country.

John Swinney has previously said he would use Trump’s affinity for Scotland in a bid to avoid tariffs being applied on imports to the US, particularly on Scotch whisky.

Swinney had publicly backed Harris, the Democratic nominee, in the run up to the 2024 presidential election.

But he had a phone conversation with the new president in December and said afterwards Trump had been keen to “express his enthusiasm for Scotland”.

A Scottish government spokesperson: said: “The first minister will continue to ensure Scotland has a constructive relationship with the United States and will do all he can to strengthen the social, cultural, and economic ties between the two countries.”

Donald Trump and Scotland

Balmoral is only about 58 miles (93km) from the Trump International golf resort in Menie, where he is due to open a new course named after his mother this summer.

Mary Anne MacLeod was born and brought up on the Isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides but emigrated to New York in 1930, where she met and married Trump’s father, Frederick.

Trump opened his first golf resort in Aberdeenshire in 2012 amid a wave of controversy and opposition due to potential environmental damage.

He had bought the site at Menie in 2006 with promises of thousands of jobs and £1bn worth of investment in the area.

Getty Images Donald Trump playing golf on a visit to Trump Turnberry
Trump played at his Turnberry course during a visit to Scotland in 2018

Scottish ministers controversially granted planning permission for the course, overriding local councillors who denied the application.

Trump accused local farmer and salmon fisherman Michael Forbes of living in a “pig like atmosphere”.

The countryside agency NatureScot said after construction that sand dunes in the area no longer merited being retained as a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI).

The original proposal included approval for a 450-room hotel, 950 holiday apartments, 36 golf villas and 500 houses.

None of those have materialised, and the course had an employee roll of just 81 as of March last year.

Getty Images Michael Forbes
Michael Forbes refused to sell his property to Trump when he was building the Menie course

In 2014, Trump bought the Turnberry estate in Ayrshire from a Dubai-based leisure group, renaming it Trump Turnberry.

He later handed over the reins of his golf business to his son, Eric, shortly before his first term as president in 2017.

That came a year after one of Trump’s most infamous visits to Scotland, when he was met by comedian Janey Godley holding a placard bearing an offensive word in protest at his arrival.

On his last visit in 2023, Trump said it was “great to be home”.