Trump Says He Will Hike China Tariffs If There Is No Deal
“If we don’t make a deal with China, I’ll just raise the tariffs even higher,” President Trump said at a cabinet meeting Tuesday.

“If we don’t make a deal with China, I’ll just raise the tariffs even higher,” President Trump said at a cabinet meeting Tuesday.

The two sides had constructive discussions on each other’s core concerns in the “phase one” deal, Xinhua said.

Prices for imported goods plunged by more than expected in October, undercutting critics who claimed tariffs would hurt consumers

Tariffs did not raise prices on consumers. But they did initially pressure profits. The latest price data shows that has eased.

President Trump has said he got a commitment from China to buy $50 billion of farm products. China is balking.

The prices of bicycles, many imported from China, are up. Prices are down for phones, appliances, computers, clothing, and televisions.

The president spoke to the Economic Club of New York on Tuesday afternoon with some of the world’s biggest business leaders.

Conservative radio legend Michael Savage tackles a wide variety of today’s hot button political issues including the House Democrats’ partisan impeachment investigation and the devastating effects of illegal immigration on the United States in an exclusive interview with Breitbart News.

Imports from Taiwan and other Asian nations are jumped higher while the U.S. put pressure on China’s economy

President Donald Trump denied the claims by Chinese officials that the U.S. has agreed to roll back tariffs.

Not everyone in the Trump White House is ready to surrender to China’s demand that the U.S. lift tariffs.

Navarro forcibly rejects the idea that “trade tensions” or “uncertainties” are holding back the world economy.

U.S. imports from China have declined by $53 billion through the first nine months of the year, Commerce Dept. data show.|

Uncertainty over trade policy is not likely to be the primary cause of depressed business investment in the U.S.

“We should have lower interest rates than Germany, Japan and all others,” Trump tweeted on Thursday morning.

Violent riots in Chile have thrown the “phase one” trade deal between the U.S. and China into doubt.

“To Tim: The Button on the IPhone was FAR better than the Swipe!” Trump wrote on Twitter, in an apparent message to Apple CEO Tim Cook.

Amazon.com, Inc. — owned by billionaire Jeff Bezos — is selling items manufactured in foreign factories with dangerous working conditions and where workers are treated as slave labor, a new report alleges.

“They made headway on specific issues and the two sides are close to finalizing some sections of the agreement,” the U.S.T.R. said.

“We don’t collect tariffs,” Sciutto said, incorrectly, Thursday. “You know that as well. Everybody in the room knows that as well.”

“My hunch is that we could get those December tariffs off if the phase one talks go well,” Larry Kudlow said Monday.

While there is good reason to be skeptical of the official economic figures released by China, the economy does appear to be slowing

The Democrat Party now represents the nation’s wealthiest citizens, while working-class Americans have flocked to the Republican Party over the last decade, analysis finds.

Trade volumes are expected to barely grow at all this year, bringing economic expansion to the lowest level since the financial crisis

China procures political compliance among American elites through development of financial relationships, explained Robert Spalding.

A confusing morning of mixed signals coming out of China about the trade deal struck with the U.S. last week.

Economist Paul Krugman, the longtime defender of global free trade and a member of the failed “Never Trump” movement, now admits that globalization has failed American workers.

The president spoke about the deal during remarks with reporters in the Oval Office at the White House after a meeting with the Vice Premier of China.

The major stock indexes surged higher Friday on signs that the U.S. and China may have reached “partial deal” on trade issues. President Donald Trump said that “good things are happening” in the trade negotiations. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said

A recent study that found permanent tariffs on Chinese imports would create more than a million American jobs has won a prestigious national award.

“We’re going to meet with them tomorrow here,” Trump said on the White House lawn. “And it’s going very, very well.”

The prices of cars, trucks, computers, phones, televisions, and beer have fallen, disproving the tariff-led inflation hysteria.

Early hopes that China might be ready for a trade deal have faded over the past two weeks, administration officials said.

Prices of light trucks, appliances, and computers all fell in September, once again demonstrating the tariffs aren’t taxing consumers.

Far from getting closer, the U.S. and China are moving apart in the run-up to high-level trade talks.

The new tariffs got the greenlight from the World Trade Organization on Wednesday.

The Trump administration is considering delisting Chinese companies from American stock exchanges, according to reports from Bloomberg, Reuters, and CNBC. Bloomberg reported that the administraton is also considering a ban on U.S. pensions from investing in Chinese stocks. Unnamed sources

President Trump said globalist politicians “ignored” for years the “abuses” of China’s trade actions that helped gut American manufacturing and have been “proven completely wrong” in regards to free trade between the United States and China.

Consumer confidence appears to have been rattled in early September by trade tensions, the Conference Board said.

The donor-class Koch network headed by GOP mega-donor Charles Koch is now admitting they failed to turn the American people against President Trump’s tariffs on Chinese imports.
