The neighbors are not happy with their new neighbor...they want him out...kinda like America did!
As the US Senate weighed whether to convict Donald Trump on impeachment charges in Washington, DC, on Tuesday, another body of elected officials sat to determine the former president's fate hundreds of miles away.
Top officials in Palm Beach, Florida, met on Zoom to determine whether Trump will be permitted to continue living in Mar-a-Lago, the members-only club he purchased in 1985, where he moved to after his presidential term ended in January.
Ever since Trump changed his legal residence from New York to Florida in 2019 (Florida has lower taxes), his neighbors have openly dreaded him moving there. Some of the neighbors have tried to stop the town of Palm Beach from permitting him to use Mar-a-Lago as his permanent residence, citing a 1993 agreement Trump signed, and evict him.
The agreement, as Insider's Thomas Colson reported, transformed it from a residence to a private club and forbids guests from staying there for more than "three non-consecutive seven day periods" a year.
Mar-a-Lago can be a club or a residence, they argue, but it cannot be both.
As the US Senate weighed whether to convict Donald Trump on impeachment charges in Washington, DC, on Tuesday, another body of elected officials sat to determine the former president's fate hundreds of miles away.
Top officials in Palm Beach, Florida, met on Zoom to determine whether Trump will be permitted to continue living in Mar-a-Lago, the members-only club he purchased in 1985, where he moved to after his presidential term ended in January.
Ever since Trump changed his legal residence from New York to Florida in 2019 (Florida has lower taxes), his neighbors have openly dreaded him moving there. Some of the neighbors have tried to stop the town of Palm Beach from permitting him to use Mar-a-Lago as his permanent residence, citing a 1993 agreement Trump signed, and evict him.
The agreement, as Insider's Thomas Colson reported, transformed it from a residence to a private club and forbids guests from staying there for more than "three non-consecutive seven day periods" a year.
Mar-a-Lago can be a club or a residence, they argue, but it cannot be both.