Trump’s Mar-A-Lago: Mixing work, business, pleasure
PALM BEACH, Fla. — President Donald Trump is back in his comfort zone at the “winter White House.” Mar-a-Lago is where women in furs and men in diamond jewelry and monogrammed slippers mingle with Sylvester Stallone and Fabio at New Year’s Eve celebrations, and Don King rubs elbows with Cabinet members, could-be ambassadors and the “MyPillow” guy at dinner.
Trump arrived at the club on Tuesday night and by Wednesday morning was at his nearby golf course, taking advantage of the good golfing weather by playing “a quick round” with golf legend Jack Nicklaus, Nicklaus’s professional golfer son Gary, and his grandson G.T., the White House said. As he departed Washington, Trump said he’d be doing “a lot of work” while in Florida, but Mar-A-Lago also serves as the president’s refuge from Washington.
All presidents have had their favourite retreats: George H.W. Bush’s family had a compound in Kennebunkport, Maine; George W. Bush loved his ranch in Crawford, Texas; and Barack Obama savored winter getaways to his home state of Hawaii. But none has drawn the fascination — or raised the ethical issues — of Mar-a-Lago, where Trump spends his time mixing work, business and pleasure in the company of dues-paying members.
It’s one of the many ways in which Trump has transformed the presidency and managed to hold onto the life he had before taking office.