Trump, White House and tariff
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President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January determined to overturn decades of American policy and build a tariff wall around a U.S. economy that used to be pretty much wide open to foreign products.
President Donald Trump warns of economic ruination if courts rule against his tariffs after the U.S. Court of International Trade blocks emergency import taxes.
President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping will speak soon to iron out trade issues including a dispute over critical minerals.
Amid court challenges, the White House asserts confidence in President Donald Trump's tariff strategy, emphasizing the administration's focus on maintaining fair trade practices.
The Trump administration criticizes a court ruling on tariffs as "judicial overreach," arguing it undermines U.S. trade negotiations and national security.
Trump and his aides have repeatedly shifted their stance on tariffs in the weeks since the president’s “Liberation Day” announcement.
The Court of International Trade blocked a large portion of President Donald Trump‘s latest tariff policies, but according to Goldman Sachs economist Alec Phillips, the White House has a clear and swift path to restoring most of them—potentially within
No matter the outcome of a major legal case on President Donald Trump’s tariffs, his import taxes are likely here to stay — in one form or another.