Trump, Canada and Mexico
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The leaders in Canada and Mexico agreed on maintaining strong trade ties and safeguarding North American competitiveness in a phone call ahead of President Trump's major tariff announcement Wednesday ...
From The Wall Street Journal
U.S. President Donald Trump has for weeks pegged April 2 as a "Liberation Day" to impose an array of new tariffs that could upend the global trade system, but has provided few details.
From Reuters
U.S. President Donald Trump was poised to impose sweeping new reciprocal tariffs on global trading partners on Wednesday, upending decades of rules-based trade, threatening cost increases and likely d...
From Reuters
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Tariffs that have already gone into effect include 25% duties on some goods from Mexico and Canada, 25% duties on all steel and aluminum imports and 20% duties on goods from China. Only some goods fro
22hon MSN
As the United States prepares to welcome the world for FIFA’s Club World Cup this June, golf’s Ryder Cup in September, the World Cup next year and the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028, the question becomes: Will the world want to come?
The move was an apparent bid to ensure that Israel is exempt from new tariffs that President Trump plans to announce on Wednesday.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney spoke with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum on Tuesday about Canada's plan to "fight unjustified trade actions" by the United States, the prime minister's office said.
1hon MSN
The new tariffs, coming on what Trump has called “Liberation Day,” is a bid to boost U.S. manufacturing and punish other countries for what he has said are years of unfair trade practices. But by most economists’ assessments, the risky move threatens to plunge the economy into a downturn and mangle decades-old alliances.
A new wave of tariffs become official this week, as President Trump tries to rewire the global economic order with a flurry of trade polices. Note: Goods imported from Mexico and Canada covered ...
Trump made his way back to the White House in no small part because of his promise to better the economy. He's staking a large part of his agenda on broad-based tariffs.
Some publishers say that costs could increase to the point where some outlets may have to cancel print editions, cut staff, or close down altogether.
U.S. stocks tumbled in early trading on Tuesday, just a day before President Donald Trump's expected announcement of sweeping new tariffs. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 250 points, or 0.6%, while the S &P 500 declined 0.45%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq ticked down 0.3%.