Donald Trump, tariffs
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Report is The Hill’s a.m. newsletter. Subscribe here or using the box below: In today’s issue: ▪ Trump focuses on foreign policy legacy ▪ Copper, pharmaceutical tariffs coming
Trump insiders maintain that it would make little sense — politically or from a policy standpoint — for the president to offer any further extensions on trade.
Ten CFR experts break down what the president's trade agenda has accomplished since he placed a ninety-day pause on his expansive “Liberation Day” tariffs.
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MiBolsilloColombia on MSNTrump vows to impose up to 200% tariff on foreign-made drugsPresident Donald Trump has made headlines with his declaration to impose a 200% tariff on foreign-made pharmaceuticals. This announcement, made during a cabinet meeting, signals a significant shift in U.
Russia message they’d been hoping for from President Donald Trump. But they don’t trust it. Across European capitals, there’s a feeling of whiplash over the administration’s recent Ukraine policy reversals and confusion about who is calling the shots at the Pentagon.
Trump’s new foreign policy leans toward recognizing spheres of influence, departing from past interventionism and potentially avoiding future great power conflicts, especially with China, if handled with restraint and clarity.
President Donald Trump seems to have learned the lesson painfully gleaned by all his 21st-century predecessors: You can’t reset US relations with Vladimir Putin.
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Cryptopolitan on MSNTrump’s foreign policy vacuum fuels BRICS global ambitionsTrump’s White House comeback in 2025 has triggered fresh tension on the global stage, and BRICS isn’t wasting the opportunity. The bloc—originally Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa—is using the power void left by the US president’s isolationist push to regroup and flex.
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AllAfrica on MSNLunch With Trump - U.S. Africa StrategyA lunch at the White House with an unexpected group of African leaders shows Trump's policy on Africa is active, opportunistic and shaped by personal relationships.On 9 July President Donald Trump will host a business lunch in the White House with the leaders of Gabon,
The first six months of President Trump's term have brought major changes to U.S. foreign policy, from gutting foreign aid to softening the approach toward Russia. They are the co-authors of an ...