DONALD Trump has gone from calling for the banning of all Muslims from US to creating a wall along the Mexican border during the US election campaign

The billionaire's ‘Make America Great Again’ push for the presidency saw him rise from being a no-hoper to a serious contender.

But he was behind one of the most controversial and vitriolic presidential campaigns in history which have left many wondering if America's will remain divided after the election.

The maverick candidate and billionaire real estate mogul divided Republicans with his antics while critics renamed his campaign slogan ‘Make America Hate Again’.

His ascent to becoming one of only two people in line to become the 45th president and the leader of the free world began through a public image makeover spawned by him starring in the US version of the reality series The Apprentice. For much of the 1980s, Mr Trump’s name had become a symbol for wealth and luxury with a career famed for building office towers, hotels, casinos, golf courses, and even the purchase of a beauty pageant.

But following the collapse of his business empire in the 1990s, The Apprentice turned him into the television celebrity that would help him launch his bid for the White House.

In June 2015, he announced his candidacy inside the lobby of the Trump Tower. The ensuing speech included a declaration of his net worth - $8.7 billion (£7.03bn) But he confounded the critics when he became the party’s nominee after campaign in which he saw off others, including hot favourites Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz. having won the most state primaries, caucuses, and delegates to the 2016 Republican National Convention.

Mr Trump’s campaign rallies attracted large crowds, while strewn with public outrage providing the sort of drama that makes good television, and he rarely makes apologies for offence. The exception came after the October release of a 2005 video of Mr Trump making lewd comments about women while talking with US television host Billy Bush on a bus.

In the video, he says “you can do anything” to women “when you’re a star” and also brag about trying to grope and kiss women.

Other Republicans strongly criticised Mr Trump for the remarks and a series of women came forward accusing him of sexual assault.

While apologising, Mr Trump also described the comments as “locker room talk” by way of mitigation.

He pledged to build a border wall separating Mexico from the United States and to make Mexico pay for it.

His warning was about undocumented Mexican immigrants who are “rapists” and drug dealers. The line came with consequences for the businessman, costing him deals and sponsorships.

“When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best. They’re not sending you. They’re not sending you,” Trump gestured toward members of the audience at his June 16 announcement speech from Trump Tower. “They’re sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.”

He said Senator John McCain, a Vietnam War veteran who spent five years as a prisoner of war, was nobody’s hero.

Mr Trump wanted a temporary ban on Muslims entering the US who come from countries with a proven history of terrorism, at least until the country has a level of vetting that can screen out potential Jihadists.

“And we have to make sure that Muslims come in and report when they see something going on,” Mr Trump said.

He was heard repeating the often refuted story that thousands of Muslims were seen cheering the 9/11 attacks - even insisting that he saw television footage of it.

He repeatedly accused Alex Salmond, the former first minister, of destroying Scotland with wind turbines and has waged a legal battle against the development.

So by the time Trump came to Scotland in June, his more inflammatory campaign talk, while not causing him irreparable damage in the opinion polls, had made him even more notorious outside of the US.

Arriving at Aberdeen airport, paying little heed to a record-breaking petition calling for him to be banned from the UK for “hate speech”, he received a difficult reception as he conducted a tour of his two golf courses.

Michael Forbes and David Milne, who were in dispute with Trump over an alleged threat to compulsory purchase their homes to make way for a luxury golf resort when they refused to sell, put up flags in a show of solidarity with the people of Mexico.

Nicola Sturgeon turned down an invitation to his event at his Turnberry golf resort on along with Ruth Davidson, the Scottish Tory leader, Kezia Dugdale of Labour and Willie Rennie for the Scottish Lib Dems.

On policy, he leding a wave of anti-trade and has repeatedly expressed admiration for Russian president Vladimir Putin and encouraged Russia to hack rival Hilary Clinton’s emails.

He has said the United States should have taken Iraq’s oil and promises that he would take oil from Daesh but has not provided details on how this would work.

His positions on alliances such as Nato and nuclear weapons also run strongly counter to Republican policies. In August, 50 senior Republican foreign policy experts wrote a public letter opposing Trump, saying that “we are convinced that he would be a dangerous president.”

He refused to release his taxes, and later boasted about using a loophole to dodge paying them saying the move was “smart” and insisted many of Mrs Clinton’s donors had also taken “massive tax write-offs”.

And the would-be leader of the free world also emerged as a Twitter warrior firing off 140-character messages into the small hours of the morning. He dismissed Fox News presenter Megyn Kelly as a “bimbo,” and once suggested former Texas governor Rick Perry should be “forced to take an IQ test” before joining the Grand Old Party presidential debates.

His detractors, including the Economist magazine, said that Trump represents a “post-truth” or “post-fact” environment, in which a politician need only say things that supporters feel should be true, with no reference to evidence.

His supporters, on the other hand applaud the fact he is different from most politicians, often viewing his lack of polish as a sign of authenticity.

While the negative headlines might have given undecided voters pause for thought, they also only served to confirm his support’s belief that the press was out to get him.

Mr Trump continued his attacks on rival Hillary Clinton right up to the end, despite the FBI saying she would not face criminal charges over the use of a private email server whilst secretary of state. “You can’t review 650,000 emails in eight days. Hillary Clinton is guilty. She knows it," he said in Michigan on Monday. further played the anti-establishment card a few days before the polls opened when Trump accused the FBI of impropriety after it once again said that his presidential rival Clinton should not face criminal charges after she used a private email server while she was secretary of state. . Mrs Clinton used a private email server when she was secretary of state from 2009 to 2013 in the Obama administration.