Trump leans in on tariffs as stocks plummet
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President Trump‘s new tariffs on dozens of countries exporting goods to the U.S. sent markets into a massive meltdown Thursday, prompting fears of a global recession.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed with a loss of more than 1,680 points, falling 3.98 percent on the day. The S&P 500 index closed with a loss of nearly 5 percent, and the Nasdaq composite closed with a loss of nearly 6 percent.
Trump’s tariff plan, revealed during an event at the White House on Wednesday, levies new taxes on imports from nearly every country.
Despite economic turbulence, Trump insisted Thursday that the rollout is “going really well.” Trump has argued that his new tariffs will lead to more manufacturing and less foreign trade reliance for the U.S. He also has pointed to tariffs as a revenue-generator for the government.
“It was an operation, like when a patient gets operated on, and it’s a big thing. I said this would exactly be the way it is,” Trump told reporters as he departed the White House to travel to Florida for the weekend. “The markets are going to boom, the stock is going to boom, the country is going to boom. And the rest of the world wants to see if there’s any way they can make a deal.”
He did not elaborate on whether he is open to negotiations with trading partners to reverse some of the tariffs.
The Hill’s Alex Gangitano and Sylvan Lane have highlighted five key surprises from the Trump administration’s play.
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OTHER COUNTRIES STRIKE BACK
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Countries around the globe responded to the tariff news with either threats of retaliation or calls for negotiation.
Canada will impose 25 percent tariffs on U.S. auto imports that do not comply with the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) on free trade, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Thursday. He said the move was a direct response to the 25 percent tariff levied on Canadian auto imports effective Thursday.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the European Union (EU) will respond with “countermeasures” if negotiations don’t produce a deal.
India’s Trade Ministry said the country is engaged in ongoing talks with the Trump administration to try to hash out an agreement and expects to “take them forward in the coming days.”
Their responses come after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent attempted to dissuade other countries from hitting back with their own increases. He said during a Wednesday interview on Fox News’s “Special Report” that the U.S. is positioning for “long-term” economic growth.
“My advice to every country right now is: Do not retaliate. Sit back, take it in, let’s see how it goes. Because if you retaliate, there will be escalation. If you don’t retaliate, this is the high-water mark,” Bessent said.
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RIGHT, LEFT ISSUE REBUKES
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Former Vice President Pence, who served alongside Trump during his first term, joined the chorus of voices criticizing Trump’s economic game plan with a social media post calling the tariffs the “largest peacetime tax hike in U.S. history.”
Others who have chimed in:
• Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) called the tariff gambit “probably the most stupid economic step taken by a president in this generation.”
• Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) warned it will trigger higher costs for “producers and consumers across the board.”
• Billionaire businessman and Trump critic Mark Cuban hit the “unrecognized failure of the Trump tariffs approach,” arguing Trump “ignored entrepreneurs and innovators.”
Follow live updates from The Hill for more reactions to Trump’s tariffs.
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Vice President Vance defended the tariffs in an interview on Fox News’s “Fox & Friends” before markets opened Thursday, saying Trump campaigned on taking the economy in a different direction: “He promised it, and now, he’s delivering.”
“I think it’s useful for all of us to step back and ask ourselves, ‘What has the globalist economy gotten the United States of America?’ … A lot of people have gotten rich from American jobs moving overseas, but American workers have not gotten rich, and frankly American companies have not gotten wealthy from the increasing growth of foreign competitors manufacturing overseas,” he said.
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The Trump administration has stressed the president is serious about tariffs and trying to reposition the U.S. in the global economy beyond trade reliance.
But others close to Trump have suggested that the self-proclaimed expert dealmaker is using tariffs as a negotiating tactic.
Eric Trump, one of the president’s sons, publicly advised affected countries to act quickly to negotiate with his father.
“The first to negotiate will win — the last will absolutely lose,” the vice president of the Trump Organization posted on social media Thursday morning. “I have seen this movie my entire life…”
Former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany also suggested that the tariffs are a strategic move.
“I firmly believe that it’s posturing,” McEnany said on Fox News, where she now works. “This is the great dealmaker, the great negotiator. And he’s someone who understands how to get to a good end result.”
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Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) — both Finance Committee members — have drafted bipartisan legislation that would give Congress more say over tariffs.
The measure, dubbed the Trade Review Act of 2025, would require the president to notify lawmakers of tariff changes within 48 hours and provide additional information about the rationale and possible impact on American businesses and consumers.
Presidential tariffs would sunset after 60 days if Congress doesn’t pass a joint resolution in support, under the Grassley-Cantwell bill, and Congress would be able to stop a president’s tariffs at any time with a resolution of disapproval.
What they are saying:
• Cantwell: “This bill reasserts Congress’s role over trade policy to ensure rules-based trade policies are transparent, consistent, and benefit the American public. Arbitrarily tariffs, particularly on our allies, damage U.S. export opportunities and raise prices for American consumers and businesses.“
• Grassley: “For too long, Congress has delegated its clear authority to regulate interstate and foreign commerce to the executive branch.”
The proposal comes just hours after the Senate, with support from some Republicans, passed a resolution striking back at Trump’s tariffs targeting Canadian imports. It’s unlikely to move in the GOP-controlled House but was seen as a signal of disapproval of Trump’s escalating tensions with Canada.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) had urged Republicans to vote against it, arguing it was a political ploy by Democrats to embarrass Trump.
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💡Perspectives:
• New York Post: Trump tariffs could stoke massive short-term pain for better trade deals.
• The Wall Street Journal: Trump’s New Protectionist Age.
• Los Angeles Times: Trump’s tariff strategy is worse than a gamble. It’s a surefire loser.
• Chicago Tribune: Trump’s foolish tariffs take the US economy back centuries.
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Read more:
• White House defends not including Russia, North Korea on tariffs.
• Tech group CEO: Trump tariffs will ‘drive inflation,’ ‘kill jobs.’
• Musk will remain ‘a friend and an adviser’ to Trump: Vance
• Trump levies tariffs on uninhabited islands.
• White House reschedules garden tours because of anti-Trump protests.
• Stellantis halts production at assembly plants in Canada, Mexico after Trump auto tariffs.
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A judge in the United Kingdom has ordered President Trump to pay more than $820,000 in legal fees for Christopher Steele, after Trump unsuccessfully sued the former British spy.
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More than 275,000 layoffs were reported last month — hoisted largely by cuts to the federal workforce from the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
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New York City Mayor Eric Adams (D) is running for reelection as an independent after the dismissal of corruption charges against him.
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A Pentagon watchdog is investigating Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth for his use of the messaging app Signal to discuss highly sensitive military information.
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TikTok deal coming down to the final minutes
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A deal on TikTok will be reached before Saturday’s deadline to ban the video-sharing app in the U.S., Vice President Vance said Thursday.
“It’ll come out before the deadline,” Vance said in a Fox News interview, referring to a deal for the app to divest from owner ByteDance and its connections to the Chinese government.
“We’ve got to wait a couple days to continue working on it, to finalize some things, and of course we’re going to let the president announce whatever we ultimately decide.”
President Trump had similarly foreshadowed a looming deal in recent days, though no details have been made public about where things stand.
“We’re working on TikTok. We have a lot of potential buyers. There’s tremendous interest in TikTok,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One on Sunday.
Trump delayed the national ban on TikTok shortly after his January inauguration, and his administration has been in active talks with potential buyers in recent weeks.
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💡Perspectives:
• The New York Times: Parenting in the Age of Social Media.
• Poynter: Analysis: As the US deadline for TikTok looms, Trump says he wants to keep it alive.
• Teen Vogue: How schools use surveillance systems to spy on student laptops.
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Read more:
• Booker’s speech tops 350 million likes on TikTok live.
• Judge blocks social media age-verification law in Arkansas.
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National security aides ousted after activist talks to Trump
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Multiple aides to the White House National Security Council (NSC) were fired after President Trump listened to far-right activist Laura Loomer‘s questions about their loyalty.
A source familiar with the firing told Kellie Meyer of NewsNation, The Hill’s sister network, that three senior officials and at least two junior officials were ousted.
Loomer acknowledged on social media that she had presented “research findings” to Trump during an Oval Office meeting Wednesday.
The NSC and Trump’s national security adviser Mike Waltz have been at the center of controversy and speculation about a group chat mishap on the Signal app that led to a journalist’s inclusion as high-level officials discussed plans for a military strike against Houthi rebels in Yemen last month.
Sources told The Hill that Trump resisted calls to fire Waltz because he did not want to be perceived as bowing to pressure from the media and Democrats.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters last week that tech billionaire and presidential adviser Elon Musk was helping the administration get to the bottom of the tech mishap.
Loomer has been a long-time ally of the president an leaned on Trump in the past, including during a recent dispute with Musk over her account on his social media platform X.
Trump told reporters on Air Force One on Thursday afternoon that he “sometimes” listens to recommendations from Loomer, who he called “a great patriot,” but he denied she was responsible for the ouster of multiple national security aides.
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💡Perspectives:
• The Hill: Signalgate scandal has long distance legs.
• Washington Post: The Signal chat’s big takeaway? Trump has built an effective team.
• MSNBC: Why Pete Hegseth’s public Venmo account matters.
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