Donald Trump‘s sons’ wives and girlfriends are getting the VIP treatment on Air Force One as his inner circle of family tags along his trip to Scotland.
The president’s sons Don Jr. and Eric joined their father and Prime Minister Keir Starmer for the flight from Glasglow to Lossiemouth in Scotland.
Don Jr.’s girlfriend Bettina Anderson and Eric’s wife Lara, who is a now a Fox News host, joined along with several grandkids.
They disembarked from Air Force One and were greeted by kilt-wearing bagpipers at the Trump International Golf Links, near Aberdeen.
Earlier, Trump sent shockwaves with a very newsy press conference.
He sensationally claimed he never had the ‘privilege’ of visiting Jeffrey Epstein‘s home on what has been dubbed ‘pedophile island.
And he also provided an update on Ghislaine Maxwell amid reports the British socialite could be angling for a pardon in exchange for cooperation over the files, which have damaged the president’s relationship with his MAGA following.
The US President has met UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer for talks at his Trump Turnberry golf resort in Ayrshire, Scotland, on the last full day of his trip to Britain.
Speaking outside the golf club with Sir Keir and his wife Victoria, Trump said the escalating crisis in Gaza was ‘one of the main reasons’ for the meeting as there was a ‘a lot of starving people’.
When asked about Russia, Trump added he was ‘very disappointed’ with President Vladimir Putin and suggested a 50-day ultimatum to agree a peace deal may be shortened.
Live updates below
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Trump and Starmer greeted by bag pipers
President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer were welcomed by bag pipers at the Trump International Golf Links, near Aberdeen.
The two leaders listened to the performance before heading inside the club.
They arrived on Marine One, landing on Trump’s course and walking the few yards to the main clubhouse.
Trump family makes the trip
President Donald Trump’s sons Don Jr. and Eric joined their father and Prime Minister Keir Starmer for the flight from Glasglow to Lossiemouth in Scotland.
The presidential sons disembarked Air Force One with their significant others: Don Jr with girlfriend Bettina Anderson and Eric with wife Lara.
Two of Don Jr’s children – Spencer and Chloe – also made the trip.
Bettina started dating Trump Jr. in 2024 after he split up with fiance Kimberly Guilfoyle, who is now nominated to be President Trump’s ambassador to Greece.
Lara Trump, meanwhile, just ruled out a political bid of her own. She decided not to run for the open Senate seat in North Carolina, her home state, but stay with her Fox News gig instead.
Eric and Don Jr. have been leading the lobbying effort to get the British Open – its biggest golf championship – played at Trump Turnberry.
The group traveled from Turnberry and are headed to see the Trump facilities in Aberdeen.
The President, Starmer and presidential sons boarded Marine One and other military choppers to make the flight from the airport to Trump’s Aberdeen golf club.
The president is opening a new facility in the Scottish city and will do the ribbon cutting himself.
Eric and Lara Trump exit Air Force One
Don Jr and Bettina Anderson with two of his children
Don J. gives daughter Chloe a hug and a kiss
Donald Trump Jr. and partner Bettina Anderson with Spencer and Chloe
Air Force One lands in Lossiemouth, Scotland
President Trump and Prime Minister Starmer exit Air Force One
Don Jr, with girlfriend Bettina Anderson, high-fives son Spencer as daughter Chloe stands nearby
Marine One with President Trump on board heads to his golf course
Trump MacLeod House & Lodge at Trump International Golf Link ahead of the president’s and prime minister’s arrival.
Breaking:Trump issues final trade deal threat
President Donald Trump levied a fresh threat to countries that have yet to announce trade deals with the U.S. with just four days to go before his new August 1 ‘doomsday’ deadline.
Trump skirted over the details when questioned about highly anticipated price hikes for steel, aluminum and pharmaceuticals, with vast economic impacts at stake in each sector.
Then he was asked about what his tariff would be for the remaining countries that haven’t landed a deal.
British PM joins Trump on Air Force One
President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer boarded Air Force One in Glasglow after their meeting at Trump’s Turnberry golf course.
The two men are headed to visit the president’s second Scotish golf course in Aberdeen, where they will dine together.
UK Liberal Democrat leader says Starmer would be ‘naive’ to ‘take Trump at his word’ with regards to the Ukraine and Gaza crises
Trump today insisted that his main priority was to ‘get the children fed’ and that the US ‘want to help’, adding: ‘it’s a terrible situation’.
He added: ‘That’s real starvation stuff. I see it, and you can’t fake that.’
But Sir Ed Davey said that while Trump’s ‘warm words on ‘ending Putin’s war and humanitarian crisis in Gaza were welcome’, Starmer ‘would be naive to take him at his word’.
He added: ‘We know Trump’s unpredictability all too well by now.
‘In both Ukraine and the Middle East the situation is utterly intolerable and the Prime Minister needs to work with our allies to put a proper plan in place, so that we can lead even if Donald Trump continues to refuse to act.
‘That should start with us recognising the state of Palestine, and seizing frozen Russian funds in the UK.’
RECAP: Five key topics / takeaways from today’s meeting between Trump and Starmer
1. Ukraine: Trump has enforced a new deadline on 10-12 days for Russia to agree to a deal on Ukraine, a near halve of his previous 50-day deadline. If Russia fail to come to an agreement, he said that he may impose sanctions and secondary tariffs.
2. Gaza: Starmer and Trump agreed there is a desperate need for humanitarian aid in Gaza and that they need a ceasefire, with Starmer describing images of starvation as ‘intolerable’ and ‘revolting’. Meanwhile, Trump said that they ‘want to see the children fed’.
3. Scotland & the UK: Trump announced that he is set to meet First Minister John Swinney today, and chose not to make any explicit comments on his views on Scottish independence. Meanwhile, Starmer spoke about his desire for a ‘stronger Scotland in a better United Kingdom’. Trump also announced a formal state visit to the UK in September.
4. Wind: Trump hit out at Aberdeen’s ‘ugly windmills’, adding that wind power is a ‘disaster’, while Starmer said that he believes in a ‘mix’.
5. Epstein: Trump denied ever making a controversial drawing for Epstein’s birthday and also claimed that he had never been to his private island in the Carribbean. He added that he wasn’t ‘overtly interested’ in the Epstein files and said that nobody had asked him about a pardon for Ghislaine Maxwell.
PICTURED: Protesters gather in Aberdeen ahead of Trump’s arrival
What happens next?
Now that the long-awaited meeting has come to a close, here is what both Trump and Starmer are expected to be up to for the rest of the day:
Both leaders will travel to Aberdeen to attend a private engagement.
Then, they are expected to visit Trump’s second golf hotel in the east of Scotland at around 5.25pm.
Scotland’s First Minister John Swinney is then expected to attend a dinner with Trump and Starmer.
WATCH: Trump shares his thoughts on how Starmer could help beat Nigel Farage
Trump leaves Turnberry
Trump’s motorcade has left Turnberry, with the US President now set to begin his journey to Aberdeen.
There, he is expected to meet First Minister John Swinney for a dinner.
Previously, he has described Mr Swinney as a ‘good man’ and said that he was looking forward to their meeting, particuarly given his ‘love’ for Scotland.
The First Minister is expected to put pressure on Trump for the removal of tariffs on ‘unique’ Scottish whisky.
Ukraine aide welcomes Trump’s reduction of the 50-day deadline for Russia
Ukrainian presidential chief of staff Andriy Yermak has spoken favourably about Trump’s decision to reduce the 50-day deadline he had placed on Russia to agree to a ceasefire.
On X, Mr Yermak said he appreciated the US President for ‘standing firm and delivering a clear message of peace through strength’.
Trump says that ‘Epstein stuff’ is ‘ridiculous’ and argues that the files are a ‘hoax’
Trump said this afternoon that his poll numbers had increased by four-and-a-half points since ‘this ridiculous Epstein stuff’, revealing that he did not speak to Jeffrey Epstein ‘for years’ due to him doing ‘something that was inappropriate’.
He added: Do you know that my poll numbers are up four-and-a-half points since this ridiculous Epstein stuff? My poll numbers are up four-and-a-half points because people don’t buy it, okay, people don’t buy it.
‘He (Jeffrey Epstein) hired help and I said don’t ever do that again… He did it again and I threw him out of the place, persona non grata, I threw him out and that was it. I’m glad I did if you want to know the truth. And by the way I never went to the island and Bill Clinton went to it supposedly 28 times.’
The US President also described the Epstein files as being ‘a hoax that had built up way beyond proportion’.
Three of the most awkward disagreements between Trump and Starmer
While discussions of the US and UK’s ‘special relationship’ and joint values were prominent, The US President and UK Prime Minister failed to reach a consensus on three key issues in today’s discussions:
Trump described wind power as a ‘disaster’, adding that wind ‘is the most expensive form of energy and it destroys the beauty of your plains and your fields and your waterways.’
He criticised the lack of windmills, alongside calling those in Aberdeen ‘some of the ugliest you’ve ever seen’.
But Starmer defended the UK’s stance, saying that he ‘believes in a mix’.
He added: ‘Obviously oil and gas is going to be with us for a very long time and that’ll be part of the mix.
‘But also wind, solar, increasingly nuclear which is what we’ve been discussing this morning, civil nuclear… The most important thing for the United Kingdom is that we have energy independence and security.’
Trump said that while he planned to visit London during his state visit in September, Sir Sadiq, mayor of London, was a ‘nasty person’, accusing him of doing a ‘terrible job’.
But Starmer defended the London mayor, adding: ‘He’s a friend of mine’.
A spokesperson for Sadiq hit back at the US President’s claims, adding that ‘diversity makes us stronger, not weaker, richer, not poorer’.
He continued: ‘Perhaps these are the reasons why a record number of Americans have applied for British citizenship under his presidency.’
3. Farmers / Inheritance tax:
When asked for an opinion on Sir Keir Starmer’s controversial changes to inheritance tax on family farms, Trump responded: ‘I love our farmers’.
He added: ‘As you know in our tax bill we have a clause that’s very important, we were losing a lot of farms to the banks because a loving mother and father would die and left their farm to their children or their children…
‘They had a 50 per cent tax to pay so the land would get valued at a high number because some of the farms were valuable but they couldn’t quantify it. And they go out and borrow money to pay the estate tax or the death tax as it’s called, and they’d over-extend and they’d lose the farm. And they’d commit suicide in many cases.’
But Starmer defended his government’s new changes, insisting that the UK’s levels ‘are nowhere near 50 per cent’ and that they have ‘just introduced when it’s paid over many years’.
He added: ‘So it’s not on those levels by any stretch of the imagination. And in all of the deals we do we make sure farmers are our focus.’
In response, Trump replied: ‘Well, we ended the estate tax, there is no estate tax on farmers’.
Sadiq Khan hits back at Trump, insisting that the UK’s diversity ‘makes us stronger’
Trump this afternoon said that while he planned to visit London during his state visit in September, Sir Sadiq, mayor of London, was a ‘nasty person’, accusing him of doing a ‘terrible job’.
Meanwhile, Starmer defended the London mayor, adding: ‘He’s a friend of mine’.
Now, a spokesperson for Sir Sadiq has said the following: ‘Sadiq is delighted that President Trump wants to come to the greatest city in the world. He’d see how our diversity makes us stronger, not weaker; richer, not poorer.
‘Perhaps these are the reasons why a record number of Americans have applied for British citizenship under his presidency.’
Trump denies drawing for Epstein’s birthday
The president denied every making a controversial doodle for Epstein’s birthday and claimed he’d never been to the financier’s private island in the Caribbean.
‘I don’t do drawings,’ Trump said. The Wall Street Journal reported it had reviewed a typewritten letter bearing Trump´s signature, framed by the seemingly hand-drawn outline of a naked woman, that Ghislaine Maxwell included in a 2003 birthday album for Epstein.
‘I’m not a drawing person. I don’t do drawings. Sometimes people say, would you draw a building? And I’ll draw four lines and a little roof, you know, for a charity stuff, but, but I’m not a drawing person,’ Trump said.
WATCH: Starmer describes the aid situation in Gaza as ‘revolting’
Trump condemned the taking of Israeli hostages by Hamas as a sign of ‘incredible hatred’, adding: ‘I think that Israel can do a lot, I would say Iran, I think it dejected themselves in this last negotiation. Can you imagine the beating they took? We wiped out their nuclear possibilities.’
Meanwhile, Sir Keir Starmer said that there was an urgent need to ‘get the hostages out’ that had been ‘held for a very, very long time’.
He added: ‘The situation on the ground in Gaza is absolutely intolerable and I think that certainly speaking for the British public and myself, seeing those images of starving children in particular are revolting.
‘And there’s a sense of revulsion in the British public at what they’re seeing and they know and we know that humanitarian aid needs to get in at speed, at volume.’
Trump denies ever visiting Epstein’s private island
President Donald Trump went on a rant about Jeffrey Epstein during his meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
He touched on why he and Epstein – who were pictured together at many social events in the 1990s and 2000s – had a falling out. Trump banned Epstein from his Mar-a-Lago Club in 2004.
‘He stole people that work for me. I said, Don’t ever do that again. He did it again, and I threw him out of the place persona non grata, I threw him out, and that was it. I’m glad I did, if you want to know the truth,’ the president said.
Trump also sent on to say he ‘never went to the island’ – referring to Epstein’s private island where many young girls claimed they experienced abuse.
‘I never had the privilege of going to his island, and I did turn it down,’ he said. ‘But a lot of people in Palm Beach were invited to his island. In one of my very good moments, I turned it down. I didn’t want to go to his island.’
Trump has ‘great love for Scotland’, while Starmer declares Scottish independence ‘the politics of yesteryear’
Trump insisted that he did not ‘wanna get involved in’ UK politics, but did say that he made a ‘correct’ prediction about how the vote for Scottish Independence would go.
He added that while he ‘did not know’ the First Minister, he had ‘heard very good things about him’ and would be meeting him today.
Meanwhile, Sir Keir Starmer spoke about his desire for a ‘stronger Scotland in a better United Kingdom’, adding that at a time of great ‘uncertainty and volatility in the world, the strength of the United Kingdom is very important for all four nations’ and was ‘very important for scotland’.
The PM continued: ‘That should be our priority, that should be our focus, not on the politics which feels like the politics of yesteryear now at a time like this.
‘And I think that the First Minister should probably focus more on his delivery in Scotland and we might have a better health service in Scotland. But at a time like this I think the United Kingdom is always stronger as all four nations.’
More on ‘windmills’ – Trump describes wind as a ‘very ugly energy’ while Starmer defends his stance as a ‘mix’
In response to Trump’s comments about wind farms, the PM said that the UK ‘believe in a mix’, adding: ‘obviously oil and gas is going to be with us for a very long time and that’ll be part of the mix.
‘But also wind, solar, increasingly nuclear which is what we’ve been discussing this morning, civil nuclear… The most important thing for the United Kingdom is that we have energy independence and security.
‘Because at the moment whatever the attributes and facilities in the North Sea, that is sold on to the international market and we buy it back off the international market.’
Describing it as a ‘historic mistake in my view’, the PM added: ‘What we need is a mix so that we get the energy security that we need in the future and that’s the focus of everything we’re doing.’
Trump describes King Charles as an ‘environmentalist’ and asserts wind power is a ‘disaster’
Trump has claimed that wind power is a ‘disaster, adding that it is ‘the most expensive form of energy and it destroys the beauty of your plains and your fields and your waterways’.
‘You can take 1,000 times more power because the wind is intermittent, it doesn’t work, it’s extremely expensive, all the windmills are made in China. They used to be Germany and China, now they’re mostly China, they all come out of China.’
On King Charles, he added: ‘King Charles is an environmentalist I will tell you and I say that in a positive way and not a negative way.
‘And every time I’ve met with him he’s talked about the environment and how important it is. And I’m all for it, I think that’s great. King Charles more than anything else loves the country.
‘But I got to know him very well, he truly is an environmentalist, he wants clean air, clean water, all of the things that we all want.’
Trump said no one has asked him for Ghislaine Maxwell pardon
President Donald Trump told the Daily Mail that no one has asked him about a pardon for Ghislaine Maxwell.
‘I’m allowed to give her a pardon. Nobody’s approached me with it. Nobody’s asked me about it. It’s in the news about that, that aspect of it. But right now, it would be inappropriate to talk about it,’ he said in Scotland during his meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
Maxwell, who met with Justice Department officials last week, is serving 20 years in prison for her involvement in Jeffrey Epstein’s sordid crimes.
WATCH: Trump calls Sadiq Khan a ‘nasty person’
In contrast to his high praise about Sir Keir and Nigel Farage, Trump has called the mayor of London a ‘nasty person’, adding that he’s done a ‘terrible job’ and is therefore ‘not a fan’.
Starmer, however, defends Mr Khan, adding: ‘He’s a friend of mine’.
Trump: Nigel Farage and Keir Starmer are ‘friends of mine’ and both ‘good men’
Trump was asked about his views on Nigel Farage wanting Parliament to be recalled for his state visit, responding: ‘Well I like Nigel, I mean Nigel as you know is a friend of mine. Nigel’s done very well, he’s a friend of mine. And Keir’s a friend of mine.’
Adding that he ‘doesn’t know the politics’ and ‘I don’t know where they stand’, he continued: said: ‘I don’t know the politics of it, I don’t know where they stand.
‘I would say one’s slightly liberal, not that liberal, slightly, and the other one’s slightly conservative, but they’re both good men.’
While Trump stated that both the US and Uk maintain a ‘really special relationship, Starmer stressed that both him and the president ‘get on’ and are capabable of achieving a ‘huge amount’.
Starmer insists he won’t censor Trump’s Truth Social platform
Starmer was questioned about the new measures introduced across the UK designed to restrict access to social media sites and, in particular, whether the US President’s site Truth Social is likely to be impacted.
In response, Trump jokingly remarks: ‘I don’t think he is going to censor my site because I say only good things’.
Turing to Starmer, he asks: ‘Will you please uncensor my site?’
Starmer then quips back: ‘We’re not censoring anyone, we’ve got some measures which are there to protect children. I feel very strongly that we should protect our young teenagers. I don’t see that as a free speech issue, I see that as a child protection issue.’
Trump says he’s looking forward to state visit to UK in September
President Donald Trump said he was looking forward to returning to the United Kingdom in September for a formal state visit.
‘We look forward to coming over,’ the president told Daily Mail after his meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer at Turnberry.
‘And I’m a big fan of King Charles. I have I’ve known him for quite a while. He’s a great guy, great person. He looks really well. To me, he looks great,’ the president added.
President Trump and first lady Melania Trump will visit Windsor Castle when they’re in England on September 17th through 19th.
Trump gives Russia 10-12 days to come to table for peace talks
President Donald Trump said he was giving Russia President Vladimir Putin a 10 or 12 day deadline to start peace talks with Ukraine.
‘I’m going to make a new deadline of about 10 or 12 days from today. There’s no reason in waiting, he said. ‘I want to be generous, but we just don’t see any progress being made.’
Originally, Trump gave Putin a 50-day deadline and threatened to bring stiff economic penalties on Russia if it did not end hostilities with Ukraine.
But he’s now expressing his impatience with Russia’ continued bombardment of Ukraine.
‘I’m disappointed in President Putin,’ he said earlier Monday.
Trump vows help for starving people of Gaza
President Donald Trump said he’ll speak with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and ending the war there.
‘We want to get the children fed,’ Trump said after a meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
The two leaders discussed the Israeli/Hamas war as part of their meeting in Turnberry, Scotland.
‘We want to help. It’s a terrible situation,’ Trump said of the starvation taking place in Gaza.
‘That’s real starvation stuff. I see it, and you can’t fake that.’
The president also emphasized he wants a ceasefire but said he was worried Hamas would be difficult to deal with because they don’t want to give up the remaining hostages.
‘When you get down to the final 10 or 20, you’re not going to be able to make a deal with these people, because they people, because they use them as a shield,’ he said.
‘Hamas has become very difficult to deal with in the last couple of days, because they don’t want to give up these last 20 because they think as long as we have them, they have them, they have protection,’ he added.
Trump says Starmer’s wife is ‘respected’ in the US
Referring to Victoria Starmer, the Prime Minister’s wife, Mr Trump added: ‘She’s a respected person all over the United States.
‘I don’t know what he’s (Sir Keir) doing but she’s very respected, as respected as him. I don’t want to say more, I’ll get myself in trouble. But she’s very, she’s a great woman and is very highly respected.’
Trump says he hopes to make Starmer ‘happy’ in today’s meeting
Amid the overpowering sound of bagpipes, Trump was heard saying that he hopes to make Sir Keir Starmer ‘happy’ today, with the US President remarking: ‘We want to make the Prime Minister happy.’
PICTURED: Trump and Starmer on the steps of Turnberry
Trump and Starmer discuss small boat crisis
Regarding immigration, Trump tells reporters that he knows ‘nothing about the boats’.
He adds: ‘But if the boats are loaded up with bad people, and they usually are, because other countries don’t send their best people, they send people that they don’t want, they’re not stupid.’
Remarking that ‘there’ll be murderers’ and ‘drug dealers’ – ‘all sorts of things… other countries don’t want’, he continues: ‘And they send them to you and they send them to us.
‘And you’ve got to stop them.’
Turning to Starmer, Trump says ‘I’ve heard you’ve taken a much stronger stance.’
Starmer, in response, then said: ‘We’ve done a lot of work stopping them coming/
‘We’ve returned 35,000 in the first year of this Labour government, so we’re very pleased that we’re getting on with returning people who’ve got no right to be here.’
Trump: ‘I’m not a big whisky drinker but maybe I should be’
When asked on the steps of Turnberry about tariffs on whisky, Trump responded: ‘We’ll talk about that, I didn’t know whisky was a problem. I’m not a big whisky drinker but maybe I should be.’
And he said of the special relationship: ‘Our relationship is unparalleled.’
Scottish First Minister John Swinney is set to put pressure on Trump for the removal of tariffs on whisky when they meet tomorrow.
‘Scotch whiskey is a unique product. It can only be produced in Scotland,’ Mr Swinney said Monday in comments to the BBC. ‘So there’s a uniqueness about that, which I think means there is a case for it to be taken out of the tariffs arrangement that is now in place.’
Alcohol also appears to have been left out of trade agreement Trump and EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced Sunday, July 27, 2025, as France and Italy push to exempt wine and the Dutch push for beer.
Trump: Hamas keeping hostages as ‘shields’ is ‘very unfair’ but ‘ceasefire is possible’
On the steps of Turnberry, Trump insisted that Hamas would not release the final 20 hostages, adding ‘that’s like their shield’.
Remarking that he has told Israel’s prime minister that the conflict muts be ‘approached in a different way’, he sadded that the US has ‘done a lot on this’.
Calling for ‘food and safety right now’, he said: ‘I think nobody’s done anything great over there – the whole place is a mess.
‘Something’s going to have to be done.’
Trump remarked that Hamas’ call refusal to release their estimated 20 hotsages alive is ‘very unfair’ but that ‘a ceasefire is possible’. He adds: ‘You have to end it’.
Trump reduces Putin’s deadline on Ukraine talks
President Donald Trump announced he’s reduced the deadline he gave Vladimir Putin to come to the table for peace talks in Ukraine, expressing his disappointment in the Russian president.
‘I’m disappointed in President Putin. Very disappointed in him. I’m going to reduce that 50 days, I gave him to a lesser number, because I think I already know the answer,’ Trump told reporters in Scotland after he greeted British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
Earlier this month Trump imposed the 50-day deadline and threatened to bring stiff economic penalties on Russia if it does not end hostilities with Ukraine.
However, Putin has continued to launch missile and drone attacks on Ukrainian cities.
‘We thought we had that settled numerous times,’ Trump noted.
‘And then President Putin goes out and starts launching rockets into some city like Kyiv and kills a lot of people in a nursing home or whatever. You have bodies lying all over the street. And I say that’s not the way to do it.’
Trump calls for other nations to ‘step up’ amid Gaza crisis
Telling reporters that there are ‘a lot of starving people’ in Gaza at the moment, Trump says that the US are ‘very much involved’.
‘I mean based on television, I would say not particularly because those children look very hungry,’ he says.
He also added: ‘I think that’s one of the main reasons for our meeting.’
The US president tells reporters ‘the fight will have to be a little bit different’ between Gaza and Israel going forwards.
He says he has told Israel’s prime minister that he will have to approach the conflict in ‘a different way’.
Trump adds that ‘a ceasefire is possible’, claiming that there would be ‘six majors wars going on’ if he wasn’t around.
Meanwhile, Starmer said that British people are ‘revolted’ by the ongoing crisis, describing it as a ‘desperate situation’.
He added: ‘Its a humanitarian crisis, its an absolute catastrophe’.
The PM also said that they are working with Jordan to get aid drops into Gaza.
Starmer to use today’s meeting to restart Gaza ceasefire talks amid cabinet recall
Sir Keir Starmer is under increased pressure from his cabinet to recognise a Palestinian state following French President Emmanual Macron.
The PM is therefore expected to use his relationship with Donald Trump to push for Washington to restart ceasefire talks when they meet in Scotland today.
Referring to his meeting with Sir Keir, President Trump said yesterday: ‘We’ll be discussing that [a ceasefire agreement]. I think we’re going to be discussing a lot about Israel.
‘They’re very much involved in terms of wanting something to happen. [Starmer] is doing a very good job, by the way.’
Sir Keir is set to recall his Cabinet from summer recess this week in order to hold talks on the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
So far, Sir Keir has resisted the calls, saying it should instead come as part of a wider peace process, with senior Labour figures saying he fears upsetting the US.
But more than 200 MPs have urged him to immediately recognise a Palestinian state. Health Secretary Wes Streeting, Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood and London mayor Sir Sadiq Khan are said to be among those urging the PM to move on the issue.
WATCH: The moment Trump greeted Starmer and his wife Victoria outside Turnberry
PICTURED: Trump and Starmer meet on the steps of Turnberry
Starmer and Trump shake hands outside Turnberry
Sir Keir Starmer has arrived at Turnberry resort to engage in talks with US President Donald Trump.
Starmer’s entrance took place amid the sound of live bagpipes as he was driven into the luxury golf course.
Trump stood outside the golf resort’s entrance where he then shook hands with Starmer as they prepare to head inside the hotel for bilateral talks.
Gaza ‘will be on the agenda today’, Business Secretary declares
Trump and Starmer’s meeting this afternoon comes amid growing global outrage at the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, while peace talks between Hamas and Israel came to a standstill last week.
Speaking to BBC Breakfast this morning, Jonathan Reynolds said that Gaza is bound to be ‘on the agenda today’.
He added: ‘The intolerable scenes that we’re seeing, the world is seeing, are the backdrop to that.
‘And of course, the US has itself secured on two occasions ceasefires in the conflict, so they have been actively engaged in it, working with Egypt, the Qataris, and other key partners in the region.
‘The US is the country I think we’d all recognise with the leverage here to really make a difference on both sides. So their role is fundamentally important.’
White House special envoy Steve Witkoff blamed Hamas for a ‘lack of desire’ to reach an agreement.
Since then, Israel has promised military pauses in three populated areas of Gaza to allow designated UN convoys of aid to reach desperate Palestinians.
But the UK, which is joining efforts to airdrop aid into the enclave and evacuate children in need of medical assistance, has said that access to supplies must be ‘urgently’ widened.
Sir Keir is under increasing pressure from MPs and even his own ministers to recognise Palestinian statehood.
It comes after French President Emmanuel Macron said his country will do so in September.
What have the US and UK already agreed on trade and what can we expect today?
The US and UK struck a deal in May in which Trump agreed to lower a tariff on UK cars and automative parts from 25 per cent to 10 per cent on a maximum of 100,000 cars.
However, an agreement for Britain’s steel imports was not reached, leaving tariffs on steel at 25 per cent.
Speaking to reporters as he left the White House on Friday, Mr Trump said he and Sir Keir would be ‘fine-tuning’ the US-UK trade deal when they meet in Scotland.
But he downplayed the prospect on an agreement on steel, warning there was ‘not a lot’ of wiggle room on steel tariffs.
Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds suggested that it may require more than simply one meeting for the matter to be resolved.
He told BBC Breakfast this morning: ‘We were very happy to announce the breakthrough that we had a few months ago in relation to sectors like automotive, aerospace, which are really important to the UK economy.
‘But we always said it was job saved, but it wasn’t job done. There’s more to do.’
Trump supporters hit back at Starmer at Turnberry golf course
Pro-Trump supporters were pictured urging the US President ‘Don’t trust Starmer’ while he hit the Turnberry golf course for the second day on Sunday.
Police were seen patrolling the golf course as associates played earlier in the morning before a huge motorcade of golf caddies arrived around 10.40am.
Supporters of the president carrying placards stood in the dunes urging him, ‘Don’t trust Starmer’, also shouting, ‘We love you Trump’.
Three people gathered to support the Republican leader, carrying a hand-painted placard which read: ‘President Trump don’t trust Starmer’.
It branded the Prime Minister an explicit term, and was jointly held by a man dressed in black, who wore an Adidas baseball cap.
A man was arrested at Prestwick Airport on Friday evening for allegedly carrying a placard calling Donald Trump an offensive word.
The man, aged 20, was arrested next to the military airport in Ayrshire where Air Force One landed ‘for abusive behaviour and refusing to stop’, according to Police Scotland.
Agents search Turnberry grounds and ready ‘the Beast’ in advance of Trump’s Starmer meeting
By Geoff Earle, Deputy U.S. Political Editor in Turnberry, Scotland
Teams of local police and Secret Service agents continue to maintain a tight security seal around Trump’s Turnberry course as the U.S. president prepares to meet British PM Keir Starmer.
Local police officers were searching shrubs around Trump’s Turnberry course seeking any possible hazards, as the presidential limo ‘the Beast’ was positioned for any Trump movements.
Police on horseback and riding ATVs have been securing areas around the club.
The president is set to greet Starmer at entrance to the club’s main building before the two hold a meeting that will touch on trade, Gaza, and Ukraine. Then, Trump heads to Glasgow, where he will fly toward his other course at Aberdeen aboard Air Force One.
That sets up a dinner event and an opening of his new golf course there.
Concerns for Trump’s health continue with splotched hand seen once again during Scottish visit
The US President was pictured with a mysterious tan makeup caked on his hand while meeting Ursula von der Leyen in Scotland on Sunday.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt revealed the president recently ‘noticed mild swelling in the lower legs’ and was evaluated by the White House medical unit.
Leavitt said he underwent a ‘comprehensive examination’ which included ‘diagnostic vascular studies.’
‘Bilateral, lower extremity ultrasounds were performed and revealed chronic venous insufficiency,’ Leavitt stated.
She said it’s a ‘common condition’ in individuals over the age of 70 and there was ‘no evidence’ of deep vein thrombosis or arterial disease.
‘The president remains in excellent health,’ Leavitt said overall.
The makeup covering has been visible in multiple press photos throughout Trump’s trip.
The splotch has been visible on other occasions throughout the past month, sparking a new round of questions about the cause.
PICTURED: Starmer lands into Glasgow’s Prestwick Airport
Sir Keir Starmer arrived at Prestwick Airport this morning to meet US President Donald Trump on a British Airways airbus.
The UK Prime Minister is currently set to travel to Turnberry Golf Course where the two leaders will meet, with Starmer expected to discuss efforts to bring about a ceasefire in Gaza.
The pair are expected to meet around noon today.
John Swinney to use Trump time to urge lower whiskey tariff
Scottish First Minister John Swinney isn’t only planning to query Trump about Gaza when the two men meet – he’s also making a pitch clear tariffs from Scotch whiskey.
‘Scotch whiskey is a unique product. It can only be produced in Scotland,’ he said Monday in comments to the BBC. ‘So there’s a uniqueness about that, which I think means there is a case for it to be taken out of the tariffs arrangement that is now in place.’
Alcohol also appears to have been left out of trade agreement Trump and EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced Sunday, July 27, 2025, as France and Italy push to exempt wine and the Dutch push for beer.
Protest van tries to keep Jeffrey Epstein saga alive on Trump’s trip
Protesters are doing what they can to keep the Jeffrey Epstein saga alive on Trump’s trip despite his admonitions to the press.
A group calling itself ‘Everyone Hates Elon’ has staged a protest van plastered with a picture of Trump and Epstein together in Aberdeen, where Trump flies later Monday.
‘Welcome to Scotland, Donald,’ it says.
Trump has been asked about Epstein matters a few times on his trip, saying he had ‘nothing to do with it’ and urging a focus on his rivals.
PICTURED: Strong police presence at Turnberry this morning ahead of Trump and Starmer meeting
Can golf talk help trade talks?
One of the primary purposes of President Donald Trump’s trip to Scotland is to promote his two golf courses: Turnberry on the Ayrshire coast and a new one in Aberdeenshire.
Trump will show off both to Prime Minister Keir Starmer – all part of his desire to host the British Open at Turnberry.
Ever since buying Turnberry in 2014, Trump has been desperate to host Britian’s biggest golf championship. It has been held four times over the past 50 years at the Scottish course but not since Trump purchased it.
Trump is already playing host to two of sports’ greatest championships during his tenure in the White House: the 2026 World Cup, taking place in the United States, and the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.
The British Open would give him the triple crown.
No doubt the promise of a championship would help Starmer in his trade negotiations with the president but there may be little the prime minister can do.
The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews decides which course gets the British Open and officials there have been clear they want any championship game to be focused on golf – not politics.
It won’t help that Starmer doesn’t play golf either.
Starmer’s plane touches down at Glasgow’s Prestwick Airport
Sir Keir Starmer’s plane has touched down at Glasgow’s Prestwick Airport.
He is set to be greeted by the US president when he arrives at the Turnberry golf course in Ayrshire, following a 40-minute drive.
Trump has ‘music blaring’ on golf buggy to drown out the sounds of protestors
President Trump reportedly has speakers on his golf cart designed to drown out the bellowing sounds of protestors gathered at his Tunberry course.
When Trump arrived early on Saturday morning, he came equipped with ‘a soundtrack, music blaring, a mobile disco from his golf buggy’, Sky News has reported.
Then, on Sunday, as he got closer to the crowds of protestors, he started playing ‘jazz music’ in a bid to silence any noise.
On Saturday, hundreds of demonstrators gathered on the cobblestone and tree-lined street in front of the US Consulate about 100 miles away in Edinburgh, Scotland’s capital.
Speakers told the crowd that Trump was not welcome and criticized British Prime Minister Keir Starmer for striking a recent trade deal to avoid stiff US tariffs on goods imported from the U.K.
Protests were planned in other cities as environmental activists, opponents of Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza and pro-Ukraine groups loosely formed a ‘Stop Trump Coalition.’
What links does Trump have to Scotland?
Despite protests from hundreds of Scots at his arrival, Trump’s history to the nation is long-standing.
His mother, Mary Anne MacLeod Trump, was born and raised just outside of Stornoway in the Isle of Lewis, and grew up in the town of Tong.
MacLeod migrated from Scotland to the U.S. at the age of 18. She would eventually marry Fred Trump and give birth to the future president.
President Trump’s new 18-hole MacLeod course in Aberdeenshire is named after his mother, with a ribbon-cutting ceremony planned on Tuesday.
On Thursday, Eric Trump aid he could not wait to see his father arrive in Scotland, adding: ‘We have just completed the greatest course on earth and waited years for this day to come.
‘I’ve never been more proud to have my father arrive in Scotland to see his original dream come to fruition. We can’t wait!‘
The Trump course with the most storied lineage is in Turnberry, on the western coast of Scotland. But golf’s biggest prize has been out of reach since Trump acquired it.
His Aberdeen courses, which son Eric Trump calls the best 36 holes in the world, are on the eastern coast.
Trump bought Turnberry for $60 million in 2014, reportedly spending $200 million improving it.
‘He’s a good man’ – what Trump has already said about Starmer ahead of today’s meeting
When Trump landed into Scotland on Friday, the President was greeted by Scottish Secretary Ian Murray before speaking to reporters.
Adding that it was ‘great to be in Scotland’, he said about Starmer: ‘I like your prime minister. He’s slightly more liberal than I am – as you probably heard – but he’s a good man. He got a trade deal done.’
Trump added: ‘You know, they’ve been working on this deal for 12 years, he got it done – that’s a good deal, it’s a good deal for the UK.’
RECAP: What was agreed between the US and EU yesterday?
European Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen visited Scotland on Sunday to meet with Trump at his Turnberry golf resort.
During a short meeting, they agreed on a US tarriff on most EU goods at 15 per cent, half of what Trump had initially threatened to implement on Friday.
Goods exempt from the tarriff included aircraft and plane parts, certain chemicals and some agriculutural products.
Describing it as the ‘biggest deal ever made’ between the two nations, Trump said that he believed the deal would ‘bring us closer together’.
But Hungary’s Prime Minister seemed far from satisfied with the agreement, insisting that he believed Trump ‘ate Von der Leyen for breakfast’ and describing her as ‘featherweight’.
Meanwhile, Italian Prime Minister GTiorgia Meloni said that while the agreement was ‘positive’, she was still awaiting ‘further details’.
WATCH: ‘Get your act together’ – Trump’s previous warning to Europe on immigration as he landed in Scotland on Friday
Scotland’s First Minister John Swinney accepts dinner invitation with Trump tonight
John Swinney has accepted an invitation to have dinner with Trump in Aberdeenshire tonight, according to Sky News.
The private dinner is set to take place ahead of a series of talks between the two leaders tomorrow.
Mr Swinney, who previously called for his official State visit to be cancelled, has pledged to ‘essentially speak out for Scotland’.
He said previously: As we welcome the President of the United States, Scotland will be showcased on the world stage. This provides Scotland with a platform to make its voice heard on the issues that matter, including war and peace, justice and democracy’
How Trump has been spending his time in Scotland so far
Since Trump’s arrival in Scotland on Friday, he has spent a significant amount of time at his treasured course.
On Saturday, he blocked off the day and hit the course early. Sporting a white USA baseball hat, he was joined by his son Eric Trump, who Trump says ‘is going to cut a ribbon’ when Trump inaugurates his new course in Aberdeenshire.
Also on the course with Trump at Turnberry was U.S. Ambassador Warren Stephens and his son, according to the White House.
Donald Trump, Jr. and his girlfriend Bettina Anderson were also present.
The Daily Mail has asked the White House for further information about which family members are accompanying Trump on the trip. None were seen traveling with him to Scotland aboard Air Force One. First lady Melania Trump is not expected on the golf-centered trip.
Alongside plenty of golf, Trump also met with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to agree an EU-US tariff.
How is the PM hoping to use his ‘warm relationship’ with the US president today?
Since arriving in Scotland, Donald Trump has praised Sir Keir Starmer for ‘doing a very good job’.
And, during his talks with Mr Trump today, the PM will hope to use his apparently warm relationship with the US President to secure American action on key issues.
The Gaza crisis is expected to be Sir Keir’s priority during his meeting with Mr Trump.
He will hope to persuade the US President to increase diplomatic pressure on Israel over humanitarian aid to Gaza, with the PM said to be ‘horrified’ by images of starvation.
Sir Keir will also seek to convince Mr Trump to keep trying for a new ceasefire in the Middle East, after talks reached a standstill last week and the US and Israel withdrew their negotiating teams.
During talks on another conflict, the PM will hope to persuade the US President to ratchet up pressure on Vladimir Putin to end Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
British officials have been heartened by a shift in Mr Trump’s stance towards Russia in recent weeks.
Prior to travelling to Britain, the US President floated the possibility of further sanctions on Moscow in a bid to force Mr Putin to negotiate a peace deal.
But while Sir Keir will be hopeful of foreign policy wins in his talks with Mr Trump, the Government has played down the prospect of a further breakthrough on US-UK trade.
The two leaders are set to discuss ‘fine-tuning’ the trade agreement they signed earlier this year.
Yet hopes are slim among UK ministers of getting Mr Trump to agree this week to lower tariffs on British steel imports to America.
What happened the last time Trump and Starmer met?
In February, Sir Keir Starmer travelled to the White House to visit Trump for the first time since he won the 2024 US Presidential Election.
During the discussion, the PM presented Trump with a letter from King Charles II, inviting him to the UK for a state visit.
In response, Trump accepted the invitation and described it as an ‘honour’.
The two engaged in discussions that included trade, with Trump confirming that the pair could reach a deal ‘very quickly’, joking that the PM was a ‘tough negotiator’.
Discussions surrounding Ukraine were also high on the table, with both leaders insisting they were willing to work together with the goal of peace.
Trump called Starmer a ‘very special person’, speaking about the ‘special relationship’ between the US and UK that was ‘like no other’.
Starmer also praised Trump for his role in attempting to achieve peace in Ukraine, describing the visit as ‘very good and very productive’.
WATCH: Anti-Trump protestors gather outside of the US consulate in Edinburgh
Hundreds of protestores gathered in Edinburgh on Saturday, July, 26, to decry Trump’s visit.
The protests seemed to be far from Trump’s mind as he played golf alongside his son, Eric, and with the US ambassador to Britain, Warren Stephens, near Turnberry, a historic course that the Trump family’s company took over in 2014.
At Tunberry, where protestors also gathered, security was tight and protesters were kept some distance away, unable to be seen by the group during Trump’s round.
Where are the two leaders meeting?
Trump is set to welcome Starmer for talks at his Turnberry golf resort in South Ayrshire this morning, the third full day of the US president’s private visit to Scotland.
The US president, who played a second round of golf at Turnberry on Sunday, will open a second 18-hole course on his Menie estate at Balmedie in Aberdeenshire later.
Ahead of his visit, a huge security operation involving officers from across the UK occured with a 10ft-high metal barrier, a ‘ring of steel’ installed at Turnberry to help protect the President.
He touched down at Prestwick Airport on Friday evening and has spent the last two days playing golf with friends and guests.
When he landed, he said it was ‘great to be in Scotland’ and spoke highly of Sir Keir, remarking to journalists on the tarmac: ‘I like your prime minister. He’s slightly more liberal than I am – as you probably heard – but he’s a good man. He got a trade deal done.’
Trump added: ‘You know, they’ve been working on this deal for 12 years, he got it done – that’s a good deal, it’s a good deal for the UK.’
Her also described Scotland’s First Minister John Swinney as a ‘good man’ and said that he was looking forward to their meeting over the weekend.
What could dominate today’s talks?
Gaza and transatlantic trade are set to be key topics discussed at today’s meeting, with Downing Street previously stating that the PM would discuss ‘what more can be done to secure the ceasefire [in the Middle East] urgently’.
The two leaders are also anticipated to discuss yesterday’s trade agreement reached between the US and EU, with the PM likely to press the president for a lowering of current tariffs on certain imports, such as steel.
Speaking from his Turnberry golf course, Trump yesterday said European Union countries would purchase $750 billion of energy from the U.S., and provide an additional $600 billion in U.S. investments.
‘All of the countries will be opened up to trade with the United States at zero tariff, and they’re agreeing to purchase a vast amount of military equipment,’ Trump added. ‘We don’t know what that number is.’
The deal was described by Trump as a ‘very powerful deal’ as well as ‘a very big deal. It’s the biggest of all the deals.’ He also called it ‘the biggest deal ever made.’
‘We wanted to rebalance the trade relations,’ said EU Commission Chair Ursula von der Leyen, confirming the agreement while sitting alongside Trump.
Scots gather in protest against Trump’s visit
US President Trump landed into Prestwick Airport on Friday evening before leaving for his Turnberry resort, in South Ayrshire.
But many Scottish residents came out in protest at the President’s visit, with Anti-Trump demonstrators gathering at a rally in Aberdeen organised by the campaign group, Stop Trump Coalition.
Welcome to our live coverage of Trump and Starmer’s meeting in Ayrshire today!
Good morning – welcome to our live coverage as President Donald Trump and Sir Keir Starmer are set to meet on his golf course in Turnberry, Scotland today!
As we anticipate the meeting between the two world leaders, here is what we know to expect of today’s meeting:
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Trump greeted by kilt-wearing bag pipers as his son Don Jr. cozies up with girlfriend in Scotland