Scottish Daily Mail

Donald Trump ‘chased Diana to be his trophy wife’

Princess found him creepy, says Selina Scott

- By Claire Duffin

DONALD Trump saw Princess Diana as the ‘ultimate trophy wife’ and ‘ bombarded’ her with flowers following the breakdown of her marriage , it has been claimed.

Broadcaste­r Selina Scott said the billionair­e businessma­n pursued the Princess of Wales to the point of ‘stalking’ in the mistaken belief he ‘had a shot’ with her.

But Miss Scott, 64, who has a long-running feud with Mr Trump, claimed he actually gave Diana ‘the creeps’.

Writing in the Sunday Times, she said: ‘ He bombarded Diana at Kensington Palace with massive bouquets, each worth hundreds of pounds.

‘Trump clearly saw Diana as the ultimate trophy wife. As the roses and orchids piled up at her apartment she became increasing­ly concerned about what she should do. It had begun to feel as if Trump was stalking her.’

Miss Scott, once the golden girl of British television, became close to Diana after meeting her in the 1980s when she visited ITN, describing her as ‘great fun’. She said the Princess confided in her about Mr Trump over dinner. ‘”What am I going to do?” she asked. “He gives me the creeps.”’

Miss Scott said Diana laughed when she told her to throw the flowers in the bin.

She added: ‘When she died in the tragic accident in Paris in 1997 Trump told friends his biggest regret was that they hadn’t dated. He said that he always thought he had a chance of romance and would have had a “shot” with her.’

Mr Trump, who is now running for US president, once described the Princess of Wales as a ‘dream lady’. Writ- ing in his 1997 book, The Art of the Comeback – which tells how he survived the depression in the 1990s and went on to make millions – he said: ‘I only have one regret in the women department – that I never had the opportunit­y to court Lady Diana Spencer.

‘I met her on a number of occasions. I couldn’t help but notice how she moved people. She lit up the room with her charm, her presence. She was a genuine princess – a dream lady.’

His spokesman told the Sunday Times: ‘They had a great relationsh­ip, liked each other a lot, but nothing ever came of it.’

Mr Trump, 69, the realestate mogul turned celebrity, is reportedly worth $4billion. He has been married three times. He announced in June that he would be seeking the Republican party’s nomination in the 2016 presidenti­al race and is currently ahead in the polls, despite a number of controvers­ial remarks.

First he claimed Mexico was bringing ‘drugs, crime and rapists’ to US and pledged to build a ‘great, great wall’ on the Mexican-American border, prompting accusation­s of racism.

In his latest comments, he has vowed to deport America’s estimated 12 million illegal immigrants if elected, saying no exceptions would be made, including deporting children. ‘We’re going to keep the families together, but they have to go,’ he said.

Miss Scott fell out with Mr Trump in 1994 after she made an unflatteri­ng documentar­y about him. The programme raised questions about his true wealth and was, she said, the ‘first unvarnishe­d examinatio­n of the man and his business practices’.

‘Almost as soon as I was ushered into his office in the Trump Tower he wanted to know the intimate details of the deteriorat­ing state of the marriage of the Prince and Princess of Wales, which was big news in America,’ she wrote yesterday.

Miss Scott, who helped launch Breakfast Television with the BBC, said Mr Trump ‘saw his chance’ once the marriage ended – and the flowers began to arrive.

‘They were accompanie­d by handwritte­n notes expressing sympathy, his great regard for her and the suggestion that they get together,’ she said.

In the article, Miss Scott told how her documentar­y – which showed him contradict­ing himself on a number of points – ‘provoked uncontroll­ed fury from Trump’.

She claimed he sent her a number of vicious letters following the broadcast of the show, and then again when she opposed his plans to build a golf course in Aberdeensh­ire. They accused her of being ‘uptight’, ‘insecure’ and ‘not at all very smart’ and only stopped when she threatened him with legal action, she said.

‘Dream lady’

 ??  ?? Pursued: Princess Diana
Pursued: Princess Diana
 ??  ?? Admirer: Trump in 1989
Admirer: Trump in 1989

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom