
Trump marks one-year assassination attempt anniversary at Club World Cup final
'It was an upset today I guess,' Mr Trump told reporters after flying back to Washington following Chelsea's victory. 'But it was a great match.'
THE TROPHY IS OURS!!! 🔵 pic.twitter.com/FhvHlgNO3c
— Chelsea FC (@ChelseaFC) July 13, 2025
Mr Trump and first lady Melania Trump were greeted with cheers as they arrived at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey just ahead of the pre-match performance by musical artists Robbie Williams and Laura Pausini. But the president got a smattering of boos when he was briefly shown on the stadium's mega-screen.
Chelsea spoiled PSG's bid to win its fourth major title of the season, dominating throughout the match and racing to a 3-0 lead in the first half.
Sunday's match fell on the first anniversary of the assassination attempt Mr Trump survived in Butler, Pennsylvania, while campaigning for president.
'It remains my firm conviction that God alone saved me that day for a righteous purpose: to restore our beloved republic to greatness and to rescue our nation from those who seek its ruin,' Mr Trump said in a statement released on Sunday night after he returned to Washington.
He also hailed doctors, emergency services personnel and rallygoers who helped guide other attendees to safety, saying: 'These men and women arrived at the rally grounds as ordinary Americans, but left as heroes.'
The international sporting match also offered an opportunity for Mr Trump and aides to huddle with Qatari government officials.
Mr Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff, in a brief exchange with reporters ahead of the match, said he remained 'hopeful' about Gaza ceasefire and hostage negotiations.
Mr Witkoff, who joined Mr Trump for the tournament finale, appeared to nod affirmatively when asked by reporters if he planned on meeting with senior officials from the Gulf nation of Qatar, which is serving as an intermediary with Hamas in the talks, during the match.
'I'll be meeting them,' Mr Witkoff said.
Sporting events have made up the bulk of Mr Trump's trips in the US since taking office this year.
In addition to his visit to the football this weekend, he has attended the Super Bowl in New Orleans, the Daytona 500 in Florida, UFC fights in Miami and Newark, New Jersey, and the NCAA wrestling championships in Philadelphia.
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Daily Mail
21 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Trump says 50-50 odds of trade deal with EU
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The Herald Scotland
23 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Donald Trump: The highs and lows of his relationship with Scotland
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As she arrived on the RMS Transylvania, Mary would have passed the Statue of Liberty on her way to the immigration centre on Ellis Island. Records show she had never visited the U.S before and was carrying the sum total of $50. Inscribed on the statue, the first thing new immigrants from Europe would see, is a poem which concludes: "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free/the wretched refuse of your teeming shore, send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me/I lift my lamp beside the golden door." Those lofty sentiments clearly haven't rubbed off on the President who declared in October last year: "We're a dumping ground. We're like a garbage can for the world. Every time I come up and talk about what they've done to our country I get angry and angrier." A few years later Mary met property developer Fred Trump and the rest is history. 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This is a good bit of business for all concerned." Indeed, the First Minister wanted to go further by making him a 'platinum member' of the Globalscot club, a unique status which would have been reserved only for The Donald. Such was the love-in, Green MSP Patrick Harvie quipped: "It's beginning to look embarrassing that the leader of the government is behaving like a teenager with a crush." Things continued in much the same vein with McConnell's successor, Alex Salmond - at least initially. In 2007 Aberdeenshire Council rejected planning permission for Trump's golf course and, rather than submitting a new application, the Apprentice host announced he would look elsewhere. In an unprecedented move, the Scottish Government called in the proposal, saying it "raises issues of importance that require consideration at a national level". Trump had met with Salmond the day before. Holyrood eventually approved the proposal, with Trump saying: "I hardly know [[Alex Salmond]], but what I know is that he's an amazing man. "Alex Salmond and I have virtually never even talked about this job but I know for a fact that he - and anyone else who's representing Scotland, unless they're the enemy - wants billions of pounds to come into Aberdeenshire and Scotland." It was on the way to a public hearing about that golf course in Balmedie that Trump visited his mother's croft on Lewis - for a grand total of 97 seconds - and declared "I do feel Scottish". In 2010, Trump was given an honorary degree by Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen raising a chuckle when he was introduced as "the highest-paid speaker in the world" and replied "not today". Speaking of his mother he said: "She was very thrifty. The Scots have this reputation for watching the dollars, so she really had a natural business instinct. "She loved everything that this great place stood for and she'd be very proud today." Lows Donald Trump at Turnberry (Image: Colin Templeton) Trump would not have such an easy relationship with Scotland for long, indeed he was stripped of that degree in 2015. The process of building that first golf course in Aberdeenshire was long and controversial with one local farmer, Michael Forbes, refusing to sell his land to the billionaire. An exasperated Trump ultimately offered £450,000 and a £50k per year job for the small farm. The response? "He can take his money and shove it up his arse." Trump did, of course, finally get his course built but was soon on a collision course with the Scottish Government over one of his pet peeves - wind turbines. As well as objecting to them aesthetically, the President appears to genuinely believe that the noise made by the rotating blades causes cancer. When permission was granted for a wind farm off the coast of Aberdeenshire - in full view of his new course - the future leader of the free world was apoplectic. He wrote a furious letter to Salmond asking: "Do you want to be known for centuries to come as 'Mad Alex - the man who destroyed Scotland'?" So incensed was The Donald he appeared before the Scottish Parliament to give evidence, drawing laughs from the public gallery when asked for his evidence of the negative impact of turbines and responding: "I am the evidence." "He came, he saw, he blustered," said CBS News. Trump threatened to withdraw all investment in Scotland if the plans went ahead, but ultimately decided to expand his portfolio with the acquisition of the Turnberry course in South Ayrshire. He abandoned the Republican primary in 2016 to open the course, where he famously predicted that the UK would vote for Brexit, stunning the political pundit class with his foresight. As he told The Sun: "I predicted Brexit. 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Sturgeon was forced into something of a climbdown with what the White House described as "a short congratulatory call" and a letter, though the First Minister made clear she would "not maintain a diplomatic silence" in the face of "abhorrent comments". When Trump was defeated by Joe Biden in 2020, she offered a "cheerio" and "don't haste ye back", with the businessman commenting on the former First Minister's own travails on a trip to Turnberry in 2023 as he said "she has not been a great person for Scotland". John Swinney then caused a stooshie of his own when he urged American voters to back Kamala Harris in November's election, only for Trump to win in a landslide. Son Eric Trump said: "My father adores Scotland, and you have a First Minister coming out and just being fairly nasty in the days leading up. 'I mean, who did that benefit? Did that benefit Scotland?" The First Minister is expected to meet with Trump on his short visit to Scotland - things may be a little frosty.


Scottish Sun
23 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Every road closure ahead of Donald Trump's visit to Scotland revealed
Ten roads will be closed completely over the weekend as the US President visits Scotland DON THE ROAD Every road closure ahead of Donald Trump's visit to Scotland revealed Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) DRIVERS have been warned that several roads will be closed ahead of Donald Trump's arrival in Scotland. The US President is expected to touch down on Air Force 1 at Prestwick Airport in Ayrshire later this evening for a private four-day visit. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 4 President Donald Trump is scheduled to arrive on Air Force 1 at Prestwick Airport later this evening Credit: Alamy 4 A multimillion-pound police operation has been launched ahead of his arrival Credit: PA 4 A ring of steel has been erected around Trump Turnberry Credit: AFP 4 Several road closures and restrictions are in place over the weekend Credit: PA Trump is set to spend the weekend at his golf resorts -Turnberry on the Ayrshire coast and Menie in Aberdeenshire. The Republican leader is scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Scotland's First Minister John Swinney during his stay. He will also cut the ribbon on his second golf course at Menie ahead of an official State Visit planned for September. A multimillion-pound security operation has been launched in preparation for the President's arrival. Around 6,000 police officers have been drafted in from across the UK in the largest police operation since the passing of Queen Elizabeth II in 2022. A ring of steel has been erected around Trump Turnberry, with 10-foot fencing encircling the exclusive Ayrshire resort. Over the weekend, ten roads in the vicinity of Maidens, Turnberry, and Prestwick Airport will be fully closed. A further eight roads will face restrictions on waiting and loading. Road closures include: Turnberry Lodge Road Lodge Road Maidens Road Station Road (Turnberry) Shanter Road Seabank View Kirksowald Road Harbour Road Baineshill Drive Sandyford Road Protesters hang off bridge in major demo ahead of Trump's Scotland visit Prohibition of Waiting and Loading restrictions include: Station Road (Monkton) Kilmarnock Road Baird Road Newdykes Shawfarm Road Monkton Road Mcintyre Road Elvis Street Welsh Road The airspace around Turnberry, Prestwick and Aberdeenshire also will also face restrictions from Thursday, July 24 until July 29. Cops have warned drone operators to ensure it is legal to fly in the area. We told previously how ten activists shut down a major road by hanging off the side of it as part of a protest against the President's visit to Scotland. Emergency services raced to the Forth Road Bridge in South Queensferry, near Edinburgh, this afternoon. The alarm was raised at around 1.05pm after cops received reports of a protest starting to build. Police are urging the public to stay clear of the area as they deal with the incident, adding that they are "engaging" with those involved.