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Brexit: Trump plays down finanicial market turmoil on Aberdeen visit

This video includes clips from Donald J. Trump for President Inc.

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US presidential candidate Donald Trump chats with the media aboard a golf cart with granddaughter Kai after he arrived at the Trump International Golf Links at Balmedie, near Aberdeen, Scotland.

On Saturday morning, during a press conference addressing England’s vote in Aberdeen, Scotland, Trump praised the nation for its decision.

United States presidential candidate Donald Trump has used his crystal ball to predict the break up of the European Union, in an interview with The Times.

U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump points as he chats with the media after he arrived at the Trump International Golf Links at Balmedie, near Aberdeen, Scotland, Saturday June 25, 2016.

Trump’s comments upon arriving at his remodeled Turnberry golf course in Scotland provided Clinton another opportunity to underscore her pitch.

Donald Trump talking about his new golf course in Scotland right after Brexit baffled a lot of people, and the Hillary Clinton campaign naturally pounced.

Donald Trump’s two-day trip across the green United Kingdom and Scotland was really messing and chaotic, says the media.

Business, with a wedge of politics, was par for the day. Clinton aides said Trump was “rooting for economic turmoil”. “Texas will never do that because Texas loves me”. “The immigration laws of the United States give the president powers to suspend entry into the country of any class of persons”, he said at Saint Anselm College.

“Think about it. You don’t know what you’ve got here”.

They say Trump he isn’t welcome, claiming he has “ramped up levels of racism, Islamophobia, and bigotry” during his bid for the White House.

The visit to the resort in the village of Balmedie, north of the oil city of Aberdeen, came at the end of a two-day trip to Scotland, Trump’s first global visit since he became the presumptive Republican nominee.

Other Democrats, openly anxious, warned that the party should not underestimate the willingness of angry American voters to choose a more uncertain path in November and side with Trump.

Trump has cheered the outcome and tried to play down American fears about it. World authorities like the International Monetary Fund for example warned about the consequences of a Brexit – but voters went ahead and voted to leave anyway.

“Americans are very much different”. “This shouldn’t even affect them”.

The ultimate challenge to Mrs Clinton and opportunity for Mr Trump is to frame the U.S. presidential election as a single issue-style referendum on the elusive vacuous nationalistic concept of reclaiming your country – build a wall to stop immigrants and all will be well.

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Similar warnings have been heard in the US election – especially from Clinton and establishment politicians who fear Trump’s “America First” stance would send shockwaves through the global system and see America pull back from its role as a guarantor of Western security.

Donald Trump welcomed the United Kingdom's vote to leave the European Union calling it Friday a declaration of independence and likening it to the opportunity Americans will have in November to vote for him