Trump, White House and tariffs
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9don MSN
The White House losing a key tariff court case at the Court of International Trade isn’t the end of the story with respect to the sweeping levies the Trump administration has imposed over the last two months.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick insisted Sunday a court fight over President Donald Trump's tariff power won't blunt the administration's leverage as it works on trade deals with key partners ahead of a July deadline.
A.M. ET, officially increased tariffs on steel and aluminum products imported into the United States from 25% to 50%. This move is the latest in the ongoing series of tariff actions taken by the U.S.
A doubling of the tariff on finished and semifinished steel and aluminum entering the United States took effect June 4.
Democratic generational battle takes shape{beacon} THE WHITE HOUSE ON THURSDAY raged against two federal courts that blocked most of President Trump’s tariffs, urging the Supreme Court to
3don MSN
After Trump announced the 90-day pause in imposing his "Liberation Day" tariffs, his administration promised he would sign 90 trade deals in 90 days.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt will face reporters on Thursday afternoon around 1:00 p.m. as the administration prepares to respond to a ruling from the U.S. Court of International Trade that throws out all tariffs Trump imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (most of them).
Senior White House officials downplayed the implications of a court ruling that blocked many of Donald Trump’s tariff measures, and expressed confidence about an appeal. “If anybody thinks this caught the administration by surprise,
Schiff again asks White House for disclosure of senior officials' financial transactions around Trump's sudden pause in April of his sweeping set of tariffs.