Trump, Scotland and golf
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BALMEDIE, Scotland (AP) — U.S. President Donald Trump opened a new golf course bearing his name in Scotland on Tuesday, capping a five-day foreign trip designed to promote his family’s luxury properties and play golf.
The Trump Organization said several unnamed businesses sold counterfeit coffee mugs, hats and other goods bearing its trademarks.
Trump went on to say that he had golfed on Monday, and he had also “stopped the war” — appearing to reference Thailand and Cambodia agreeing to a ceasefire brokered by the president and Anwar Ibrahim, Malaysia’s prime minister, following roughly five days of fighting.
U.S. President Donald Trump is playing 18 holes on his new golf course in Scotland as pressure grows for him to address starvation among Palestinians in Israeli-controlled Gaza
1hon MSN
Trump International Scotland near Aberdeen opens Aug. 13, 2025. Donald and his sons Eric and Don Jr. attended a ribbon-cutting for the new golf course
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But The Trump Organization’s lawsuit isn’t your run-of-the-mill trademark case — look at the filing and you won’t find a list of sellers the firm is going after. Instead, there’s a vague stand-in for the defendants: “The individuals, corporations, limited liability companies … identified on Schedule A.”
Senate Democrats are imploring President Trump’s administration to step up its role in addressing suffering and starvation in Gaza.
TACO or tariffs? An August 1 deadline looms after the European Union became the latest of the top US trading partners to reach a deal with Trump.