Revenues were also rising at the Trump golf clubs in Jupiter and West Palm Beach, Fla., two of the three golf clubs that the family owns in the state. Mr. Trump carried Florida in the election.

Until the violence in Charlottesville, Va., which generated a wave of cancellations at the Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Fla., business at that Trump property was also climbing, according to the president’s financial disclosure report.

That report paints a darker picture in states that Mr. Trump lost.

The Trump SoHo condominium-hotel in New York and the Trump International Hotel & Tower Chicago — both cities that are liberal strongholds — are seeing signs of hardship, according to two employees briefed on the company’s financials who were not authorized to speak publicly about them.

The red-blue contrast is even more apparent with the golf courses. Revenues over the past year have declined at the Ferry Point golf club in the Bronx, N.Y., at the Bedminster club in New Jersey, and at the club in Westchester County, N.Y., just a few miles from Mrs. Clinton’s home. Mr. Trump lost both states by large margins.

At the club in the Bronx, which is open to the public, golfers played about 2,200 fewer rounds in the most recent fiscal year, an 8 percent drop compared with a year earlier, according to data The Times obtained through a public records request from the City of New York.

The Trump Organization does not dispute that some properties are showing sensitivity to political factors. In June, the company introduced a line of budget-conscious hotels — the first are planned for Mississippi, which Mr. Trump won by an overwhelming margin — with a name, American Idea, that echoed the president’s campaign themes.