President Donald Trump has announced a flurry of trade activity ahead of Friday’s official start of his new tariffs regime – executive actions including 50% tariffs on Brazil, a 15% tax on American imports from South Korea and an end to exemptions for imported goods worth less than $800.
The Latest: Trump triumphant over new tariffs regime, but concerns abound
President Donald Trump has announced a flurry of trade activity ahead of Friday’s official start of his new tariffs regime – executive actions including 50% tariffs on Brazil, a 15% tax on American imports from South Korea and an end to exemptions for imported goods worth less than $800.
The implementation is being portrayed by the White House as a testament to Trump’s negotiating skills, even as concerns persist that the taxes will stunt the U.S. economy and increase inflation in ways that disproportionately harm working-class Americans. And while Trump has been getting his way on trade, strong-arming the European Union, Japan and other partners, he’s facing at least seven lawsuits charging that he’s overstepped his authority.
Meanwhile, Trump lashed out at Republican Sen. Josh Hawley after his proposal to ban stock trading by members of Congress – and the president and vice president – won bipartisan approval to advance in a committee vote. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent sought to walk back his comments that Trump-branded investment accounts will be “a back door” to privatizing Social Security. And privacy concerns mount about a new health tracking system that would share Americans’ personal data with tech companies.
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