As President Trump entered his second term, the trade war he started with China and which former President Biden kept in place suggests taming the deficit to
Trade battles being threatened by President Trump would spike food prices, help China and risk key U.S. economic relationships, Mexico’s former trade chief said Monday “I say bring it
President Donald Trump said a 25% tariff on Canada and Mexico could come on February 1 and that a universal tariff isn't off the table.
President Donald Trump told reporters hours after taking office that he was considering levying a blanket duty on Mexico and Canada on Feb. 1.
President Claudia Sheinbaum is detaining more migrants, seizing more fentanyl and positioning her country as a key ally against China. But the U.S. stance has shifted, too.
President Donald Trump is fanning the flames of a trade war with China by renewing campaign threats to up duties on products made by the sourcing superpower. In a statement to reporters at the White House on Tuesday evening, Trump said his administration was considering levying 10-percent tariffs on China starting next month.
The president said he planned to put tariffs on America’s neighbors on Feb. 1, as he signed an executive order mandating a sweeping review of U.S. trade policy.
The supply chain for drugs poisoning America has become highly concentrated and vulnerable, depending on illegal activities in Communist China and Mexico.
The same experts have found that most importers simply pass the added cost of tariffs on to U.S. consumers by jacking up their prices — rather than going out of their way to rep
Trump threatened tariffs of as much as 60% on China during his campaign but has tempered his plans. Canada and Mexico are now being threatened with a 25% tariff.