FURTHER protests against Donald Trump’s forthcoming visit to the UK are being planned after the tycoon-turned-politician announced he would embark on a whistle-stop tour of all of his golf resorts.

The presumptive US Republican Presidential nominee is due to attend the official opening of Trump Turnberry on June 24, the day after the EU referendum. 

However, he announced yesterday he would then travel to his controversial development on the Menie Estate in Aberdeenshire, before visiting his links site at Doonbeg in County Clare on the west coast of Ireland. 

Mr Trump confirmed in a series of tweets that he would extend his trip to Turnberry to visit Aberdeen, “the oil capital of Europe” and then the “magnificent resort” of Doonbeg.

He added: “Then, on June 25 – back to the USA to make America great again.”

The visit will coincide with US Vice-President Joe Biden’s trip to Ireland and the result of the Brexit referendum.

Trump Turnberry, which was bought by the businessman in 2014, reopened on Wednesday after a £200 million restoration.

It is the second Scottish golf resort he has launched following the opening of Trump International Golf Links, Scotland, in Aberdeenshire in 2012.

However, that development has been mired in controversy after Mr Trump went to war with local landowners and became embroiled in a battle around an offshore windfarm. 

Campaigners are already planning protests at his Ayrshire resort and more are expected at his other courses. 

The red carpet was rolled out for Mr Trump when he visited Ireland after buying Doonbeg in 2014.

Finance minister Michael Noonan also greeted him off the plane.

But it is not clear what reception will be laid on for him in government circles this time after Taoiseach Enda Kenny made a damning criticism of his attitudes to immigration and branded some comments from the campaign as “racist and dangerous”.

Mr Trump is also battling to get planning permission for a huge wall to act as a sea defence along 1.7 miles at his Irish course. 

Irish MP Paul Murphy, of People Before Profit-Anti Austerity Alliance, said Mr Trump should not be given the red carpet treatment.

He said: “Instead there should be a protest to send a clear message he and his policies are not welcome here and that we stand in solidarity with the thousands of people from all backgrounds who have protested against him in the US.”

Another MP, Mick Barry, also with the group, contrasted the Doonbeg wall with Mr Trump’s proposed wall along the Mexican border and the banning Muslims from the US.

“They are aimed at scapegoating immigrants and intensifying Islamophobia,” he said.

Green Party leader Eamon Ryan called for a peaceful, purposeful protest to show the world that Ireland rejects the divisive views espoused by Mr Trump.

“We will not meet our common challenges by building walls between nations or by demonising people of different faiths,” he said.

“We have skin in this game because his efforts to undermine climate action will put us in peril.

“We have an obligation during this visit to say to our Irish-American cousins:

‘Whatever you do, please do not vote for this man’.”

Mr Trump is expected to be formally named as the Republican nominee for the White House at the party’s national convention in Cleveland, Ohio, in July.