Panama hotel owners seek to strip Trump name, management
WASHINGTON — Owners of the Trump International Hotel in Panama are working to strip President Donald Trump’s name from the 70-story building and fire the hotel management company run by Trump’s family. The property once paid at least $32 million to associate with Trump.
The uprising by Panama hotel owners — following news that Trump was effectively being paid to end a similar management contract for the Trump Soho hotel in New York — points to continued struggles for the Trump brand outside strongholds like Mar-a-Lago in Florida and the Trump Hotel in Washington.
The Trump Organization acknowledged to The Associated Press the effort to strip away the Panama property’s management and brand. It said it believed the move was a contract violation.
“Not only do we have a valid, binding and enforceable longterm management agreement, but any suggestion that the hotel is not performing up to expectations is belied by the actual facts,” the Trump Organization said in a statement.
Located on Panama City’s waterfront, the Trump hotel is within a 70-story tower in the shape of a wind-filled sail. Despite lavish amenities — visitors can sip drinks next to a 65th-floor, edgeless pool that appears to float above the ocean — it has struggled with poor occupancy.
“I bought there because I thought Trump’s name made it a safe investment,” said Al Mon-stavicius, a retired Nevada doctor who owns a penthouse hotel unit in the Panama project. “But Latinos are a real problem for him in Panama.”
In August, investment firm Ithaca Capital Partners of Miami, paid the Panama project’s struggling developer an undisclosed sum for the property’s restaurants, conference center and 202 long-unsold condo hotel units, giving Ithaca a singlehanded majority of the hotel owners’ votes.
The termination would mark a new setback for the Trump family’s hotel business, which already lacked the scale of major international chains. The family announced two new hotel brands after the presidential election — Scion and American Idea — and said it has already signed dozens of letters of intent with prospective licensees, but tangible progress in the form of permits and construction has been scarce.