Trump, US and tariffs
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China, Trump and Tariff
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In an obscure courthouse in downtown Manhattan, a group of small businesses are taking on one of President Donald Trump's boldest uses of executive authority.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who Trump recently said he’s considering firing, has a 37% approval rating, beneath the lowest approval ratings for the previous three federal reserve chairs, but above his 36% average approval rating in 2023, Gallup found.
Inflation climbed at the slowest pace since early 2021 in April, surprising economists who anticipated tariff-related increases.
With his tariff 'deals,' President Trump leaves international trade relationships even more unsettled than before.
Analysts welcomed the de-escalation agreed in Geneva, but told Newsweek that many questions remain unanswered.
Trump proposed to lower tariffs on Chinese imports to 80% from 145% on eve of negotiations with the country's third-largest trading partner.
Donald Trump wants to put a tariff on movies made overseas, but he says that will not extend to the James Bond franchise.
The plaintiffs, a group of small businesses who claim that Trump’s tariffs are illegal and will decimate their businesses, are represented by the Liberty Justice Center, a libertarian public interest litigation firm.