Trump, tariff and trade policy
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Trump, steel and aluminum tariffs
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A federal court is blocking President Donald Trump from imposing sweeping tariffs on imports under an emergency-powers law.
Donald Trump's wide-ranging taxes on imports were reinstated this week after being deemed illegal by a trade court. Their ultimate fate is yet to be decided.
By Tom Käckenhoff and Christoph Steitz DUESSELDORF/FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Salzgitter, Germany's second-biggest steelmaker, warned on Monday that Washington's tariff policy was dealing a severe blow to European industry,
The rulings against the levies in two federal courts – the U.S. Court of International Trade and the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C. -- centered on Trump's unprecedented invocation of the International Economic Emergency Powers Act as a legal justification for tariffs.
U.S. companies are facing economic headwinds that are reducing incentive to continue high production levels of oil. Uncertainty from tariffs is the main obstacle for American oil producers.
President Trump's Truth Social account is full of jarring juxtapositions: major trade policy announcements and presidential nominations broken up by bizarre conspiracies and personal boasts. Why it matters: The president's words matter,
As the trade standoff with China continues, President Trump announced the tariff on foreign steel will double from 25% to 50%.
The exemption expired over the weekend, but the Trump administration gives GPU makers another reprieve as it weighs a larger package of semiconductor tariffs.