U.S. President Donald Trump on Sunday night said he had signed the $900 billion (N349.2 trillion) coronavirus relief package.
Scottish lawmakers on Wednesday decide whether to call for an investigation into former US president Donald Trump’s finances over concerns about how he acquired two golf courses in the country.
Members of Scottish Parliament (MSPs) will vote on a motion calling for a probe into the Trump Organization’s two Scottish golf courses using an “unexplained wealth order.”
The legal instrument require individuals to explain the source of wealth used to acquire property and other assets in the UK.
Members of the Scottish Green Party who initiated the vote have said there are questions to be answered about how the Trump Organization’s holdings in Scotland were acquired.
“There are serious concerns about how he financed the cash purchases of his Scottish golf courses,” Scottish Greens co-leader Patrick Harvie told The Scotsman newspaper.
“The government must seek an unexplained wealth order to shine a light on Trump’s shadowy dealings,” he added.
The prospect of the vote has sparked a spat between Harvie and Trump’s son Eric, a trustee and executive vice-president of the Trump Organisation.
“At a critical time when politicians should be focused on saving lives and reopening businesses in Scotland, they are focused on advancing their personal agendas,” he said.
“If Harvie and the rest of the Scottish government continue to treat overseas investors like this, it will deter future investors from conducting business in Scotland, ultimately crushing their economy, tourism and hospitality industries.”
Harvie responded by accusing Eric Trump of throwing a “tantrum” and noted that his remarks did not detail “where his dad got the money to buy his Scottish golf courses”.
Ahead of the vote, one protester wearing a giant Trump mask and pulling a golf trolley with his pockets stuffed with cash, along with a placard which read “investigate me,” stood outside the parliament building at Holyrood.
The Trump Organization’s presence in Scotland at its two golf courses at Turnberry and the Trump International Links in Aberdeenshire has been controversial both before and during Donald Trump’s presidency, a trend that has continued since his departure from the White House.
His visit to Turnberry on the Ayrshire coast prompted thousands to protest in Glasgow and Edinburgh in 2019, and Trump was heckled as he played golf at the course.
Following the storming of the US Capitol by Trump supporters in January, the organisers of the British Open golf championship said the competition would not be staged at Turnberry for the “forseeable future”.
Last month, Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon had to warn the outgoing president that he should not visit Scotland during the coronavirus pandemic to play golf.
While MSPs hope that the vote will put pressure on Sturgeon’s government to act, Wednesday’s ballot is non-binding.
A Scottish government spokesman said this week that the decision was an “operational matter” for the Civil Recovery Unit, a Scottish enforcement authority.
“It would not be appropriate for the Scottish government to comment on this,” the spokesman added.