Trump himself has been campaigning in Nevada, so he'll be missing the hurricane, but there's plenty of people hoping it destroys his house (ideally, without hurting anyone in the process).
Dear God, if Hurricane Matthew want to make landfall, please visit that shithole Mar-A-Lago.... pic.twitter.com/K526WZVqwF
— Koko Kaepernick (@kokokaepernick) October 6, 2016
Mar-a-Lago is in the eye of #HurricaneMatthew
— k8 (@rolling_2) October 5, 2016
wink wink
To be entirely fair, Trump isn't personally responsible for the sprawling 58-bedroom, 38-bathroom, gold-plated extravaganza that is Mar-a-Lago. It was originally the home of General Foods heiress Marjorie Merriweather Post and is considered one of Florida's most architecturally significant properties.@realDonaldTrump If hurricane makes a direct hit on Mar-a-Lago Club, spares everyone else, and then goes out to sea, I'd be fine with that. https://t.co/MbDDAU4Xai
— Maurice Pinzon (@MauricePinzon) October 6, 2016
But, thanks to the 2016 election, it's become synonymous with Trump's hypocrisy (he brought in hundreds of foreign workers on H-2B visas while talking about how we need to return jobs to U.S. citizens) and shady business practices (he routinely failed to pay employees and contractors). Also, last week he made the argument that he couldn't possibly be racist because he let black people and Muslims into Mar-a-Lago.
In any case, as of 11 a.m. Thursday, with the storm yet to hit, Mar-a-Lago looked to be directly in the storm's path. Winds were picking up in Palm Beach, and the gate to the house was closed. An empty car from the Palm Beach Police Department was conspicuously parked in a driveway nearby.
A Mar-a-Lago security guard tried to stop New Times from taking a photo of the building, raising another question: Given that the entire town of Palm Beach is under mandatory evacuation, why is Donald Trump forcing his employees to stick around just in case some nosy reporter stops by?
Trump did not respond to Tweets requesting comment.