Scion, a line of hotels that will target younger clients, was unveiled last month in a press release that quoted three different Trump Organisation executives, but not the candidate.
Since entering the race last year, Trump has offended groups including Mexicans, Muslims, the disabled and veterans. A video from 2005 that showed him bragging about making lewd advances on women prompted almost a dozen to say he'd harassed them - claims that he strongly denies. Those associations will make corporate clients less likely to book Trump-branded properties, said Bruce Himelstein, a former chief marketing officer for Loews and Ritz-Carlton hotels.
"He's now a polarising figure. When he was putting his hotels together, he wasn't," said Himelstein, now a consultant. "There's definitely an impact." His campaign has already reeled. A candidate that as recently as three weeks ago was in a close race is now waging an uphill battle to close a gap that's grown to 5.9 percentage points nationally, according to a RealClearPolitics poll average.
Enter Scion. The new brand is planned for use at city and resort locations, Trump Hotels said when Scion was announced September 28. The new hotels are intended to appeal "to a new and different type of guest in more locations around the globe," Trump Hotels said. The first Scion location is scheduled to open in 2017.
The Scion flag won't replace the Trump brand, according to Trump Hotels. It was announced more than a week before the Washington Post published a 2005 video of Trump bragging about grabbing and kissing women.
"We chose this name as a nod to the Trump family and their tremendous business successes, including Trump Hotels," Eric Danziger, chief executive officer of Trump Hotels, said in an e-mail. "We want to acknowledge the association with Trump in a genuine way, while allowing the new lifestyle brand to stand on its own."
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