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"I don't blame China. I don't blame anybody. I blame the people that were sitting at that desk in that other beautiful Oval Office for allowing it to happen," Trump added.
From TheStreet
Beijing on Friday increased its tariffs on U.S. imports to 125%, hitting back against U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to hike duties on Chinese goods to 145%, raising the stakes in a trade war...
From Reuters
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White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said President Donald Trump is "optimistic" the U.S. and China can strike a deal over tariffs.
Whitmer visited the White House to advocate for a pair of issues important to her state. The visit had broader political overtones, though.
2don MSN
President Donald Trump has not been shy about his desire for the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates. Lower rates have historically been good for stocks; they make the cost of borrowing cheaper, which would help the country's future debt issuances,
“When you’re creating more than a quarter of a million jobs, that’s a great, great tailwind to have as you head into something as unknown as what the president is trying to do to remake the global system.
President Donald Trump praised Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer this week after slamming her last year as a "terrible governor"
Critics argue the policy flip-flop highlights erratic leadership, with analysts noting the market rebound was more a reaction to previous economic damage than a validation of Trump’s strategy. President Trump is back to talking about the markets,
Authoritarian leaders are most dangerous when they’re popular. Wrecking the economy is unlikely to broaden Trump’s support.
A pair of Donald Trump's top advisers are at odds. Elon Musk called Peter Navarro a "moron" and "dumber than a sack of bricks."
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The Mirror US on MSNKaroline Leavitt skewered over Donald Trump's China tariffs flip flopWhite House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt gave broad answers to reporters when asked to give details on when talks were happening between the US and China
The way your letters slant or curve and the direction of your pen strokes can reveal a lot about your personality, according to graphologists.
President Donald Trump’s rapid-fire trade war has set in motion a commercial rupture without precedent, which is rippling through the global economy in unpredictable and costly ways. The triple-digit taxes that the president has imposed on Chinese products — and China’s retaliatory measures — are expected to shrink trade between the world’s two largest economies from a recent annual peak of nearly $700 billion to almost nothing.