Donald Trump, tariffs
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The fallout continues after President Donald Trump's unveiling of severe tariffs against virtually all U.S. trading partners. On Sunday, ABC's "This Week" anchor George Stephanopoulos pressed White Ho...
From ABC News
U.S. customs agents began collecting President Donald Trump's unilateral 10% tariff on all imports from many countries on Saturday, with higher levies on goods from 57 larger trading partners due to s...
From Reuters
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer spoke with reporters on the Hill Friday and called on more Republicans to join a bipartisan bill from Sens. Maria Cantwell and Chuck Grassley to limit President D...
From ABC
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Members of Congress have been keeping a wary eye on the roiling financial markets that have clobbered Americans’ 401(k) accounts, amid uncertainty over President Donald Trump’s tariffs.
Some high-ranking Republicans openly expressed their fears of economic fallout surrounding President Donald Trump’s new sweeping tariff policy unveiled Wednesday—breaking with the president after the package caused stocks to nosedive and and threatened to drive up prices for a long list of consumer goods.
The big question as global stock selloffs point to another week of plunging markets in the US is how much pain President Donald Trump is prepared to inflict to test his tariff theories.
A number of Republican legislators spearheaded or joined in efforts to rein in the president's authority on tariffs.
Few Republicans are eager to defend the president's tariffs, putting the party on the back foot for the first time in Trump’s new term.
The tariffs were fueling the strongest GOP pushback since Trump's inauguration, though Speaker Mike Johnson defended them