GLASGOW, Scotland — “My mother was born in the Hebrides, in Stornoway, so that's serious Scotland,” Donald Trump told an interviewer in 2010.

The U.S. presidential candidate has long made much of his Scottish roots. He likes Scotland so much that he chose Aberdeenshire as the location for a controversial £1 billion golfing complex.

But the plutocrat's relationship with his adopted home has been a rocky one. The Scots appear to be turning on him in the wake of this week's call for "a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States."

The Herald, one of Scotland's largest newspapers, carried a front page advert Tuesday for another of Trump's Scottish golfing interests, at Turnberry. By Wednesday, almost all of Scotland's political establishment, and even its universities, had made clear their disapproval of Trump's latest outburst.

Nicola Sturgeon, Scotland's first minister, announced she was withdrawing the U.S. mogul's membership of GlobalScot, an international business network, with “immediate effect.”

Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen stripped Trump of an honorary degree awarded in 2010, describing his comments as "wholly incompatible" with its values.

The Scottish government's International Development Minister Humza Yousaf, himself a Muslim, called Trump's comments “hate speech” and warned that his proposed policy, if implemented, would transform the U.S. into an "apartheid state."

Trump's comments were "divisive, hateful and designed to cause division between communities," Yousaf said.

Patrick Harvie, a Scottish Green MSP, lodged a motion at the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh, condemning Trump for comments which he said appear "increasingly fascist."

“This bigoted blowhard of a man is being rightly condemned far and wide, and I'm confident that Scotland will reject his extremist rhetoric,” said Harvie, who had previously clashed with Trump over a proposed wind farm near the Aberdeenshire golf course.

In light of the Republican hopeful's latest remarks, Harvie said he could not imagine any “self-respecting person wanting to spend money” in any of Trump's business interests in Scotland.

Scottish ministers and Scottish National Party MPs urged Theresa May, the U.K. home secretary, to consider banning Trump from traveling to the U.K.

Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh, the SNP's trade and investment spokeswoman at Westminster, said Trump should be barred for "hate preaching."

“While we cannot control what he says on U.S. soil, we can demonstrate leadership in relation to this issue and say: Not in the United Kingdom do we want people making Islamophobic, racist, anti-Muslim remarks that are completely unfounded and unhelpful when we continue our fight against terrorism,” the Scottish MP, who is Muslim, said.

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The Scottish government, and the Scottish National Party, have not always held Trump in such low esteem. Back in 2008, the Edinburgh administration stepped in when Aberdeenshire Council rejected Trump's bid for planning permission for his £1 billion luxury golfing complex.

Construction of the sprawling development on the scenic Aberdeenshire coast went ahead in the face of vociferous local opposition.

In 2012, Michael Forbes, a farmer who refused to sell his land to Trump, won the Top Scot award at the Glenfiddich Spirit of Scotland Awards. Trump responded by calling the awards a "terrible embarrassment to Scotland."

Forbes' struggle with Trump became the centerpiece of an award-winning documentary by the name of “You've Been Trumped.”

Trump and then Scottish first minister and SNP leader Alex Salmond were on good terms, with the pair photographed together on a number of occasions. But the relationship turned sour after a decision was made to build 11 wind turbines near the golf course.

Trump didn’t hold back, and accused Salmond of being "hell-bent on destroying Scotland's coastline and therefore Scotland itself."

The Apprentice star went on to take out adverts comparing the development of wind farms to the Lockerbie bombing, which killed 259 passengers on board Pan Am Flight 103 and 11 residents of the Scottish town in 1989.

In June, an Edinburgh court dismissed Trump’s request for a public inquiry into what he says was the Scottish government’s unfair approval for the wind power project.

Scottish judges concluded Trump's lawyers had not come “anywhere near” substantiating his suspicions.

Here too, Trump claimed that the wind farm project — which is intended to test offshore wind technologies while producing electricity for commercial sale — threatened “the destruction of Aberdeen and Scotland itself.”

Trump's investment in Aberdeenshire has so far been much less substantial than originally billed and he has repeatedly declined to say when he might start planned construction on a second golf course, hotel expansion and more than 2,000 holiday and residential homes.

Following the June judgement, Salmond, now MP for Gordon in Aberdeenshire, said he was "delighted by the decision of the highest court in Scotland to turn down Mr. Trump's case.”

"The Trump organization has now been beaten twice in the Scottish courts and I hope that he will now accept the decision with good grace," he said.

Peter Geoghegan is a writer and journalist based in Glasgow. His latest book “The People’s Referendum: Why Scotland Will Never Be The Same Again” was published in 2015 by Luath Press.