Trump, Court of International Trade and tariffs
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As of May 28, the U.S. had collected $68.23 billion in tariff revenue for 2025—an increase of 78 percent over the same period last year.
(Reuters) -A federal appeals court on Thursday temporarily reinstated U.S. President Donald Trump's most sweeping tariffs, just a day after a trade court ruled that Trump had overstepped his authority in imposing the duties and ordered an immediate block on them.
The legal confusion over tariffs has buffeted U.S. trading partners around the world, casting doubt on the durability of Trump’s favorite bargaining tool.
President Trump played this video of CNBC's Rick Santelli and Joe Kernen talking about the tariffs, Friday in the Oval Office: PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: I think what I'll do, if you don't mind—numbers have just come out which are rather extraordinary—and I thought I'd play a tape of one of the people who I've respected over the years,
US ports have been seeing pandemic-level declines in imports, so good news on tariffs was just what port officials were hoping for.
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Donald Trump's wide-ranging taxes on imports were briefly halted by a trade court this week before being allowed to continue, setting up a bigger legal showdown soon.
US stocks are lower after Trump accuses China of violating a trade deal. Administration maps new curbs. Investors shrug off cooler inflation data.
A new report alleges Elon Musk had a drug habit, just in time for his (final?) press conference at the White House.
Crypto markets stay flat as Trump slams China but holds off on 145% tariffs. A potential Trump-Xi call may signal diplomatic next steps.
A new Yahoo News/YouGov survey finds that 54% of Americans now disapprove of the president’s job performance — and even more think he’s ‘gone too far’ on trade.