Trump, tariffs
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Trump, U.S. Steel and Nippon
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Trump, Guatemala and working to return
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By Michael Martina, Yimou Lee and Ben Blanchard WASHINGTON/TAIPEI (Reuters) -The United States plans to ramp up weapons sales to Taipei to a level exceeding President Donald Trump's first term as part of an effort to deter China as it intensifies military pressure on the democratic island,
Federal court determined that President Trump doesn't have the authority to unilaterally impose tariffs, dealing a sweeping blow to his main weapon in his trade war.
President Trump criticized a recent court ruling on his tariff plan on Thursday. He directed criticism to the Federalist Society and expressed disappointment in judicial nominations.
The Trump administration has plans to turn remigration — an idea associated with the far-right in Europe — into an official federal U.S. office.
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Mediaite on MSNTrump Turns on Conservative Group’s ‘Sleazebag’ Leader Who Recommended Judges: ‘Probably Hates America’President Donald Trump laid into the conservative Federalist Society and its "sleazebag" chairman of the board Leonard Leo, accusing him of "hating America."
A White House official stated that the White House's legal team is currently finalizing the details of the gift, working on a memorandum of understanding -- or MOU -- between the United States and Qatar. The Washington Post first reported the news.
The Federalist Society is a pillar of the conservative legal movement that once advised Trump on judicial picks. Now he's slamming the group.
Two courtroom defeats dealt a blow to President Donald Trump’s strategy, even as an appeals court reinstated existing tariffs.
The president picked Paul Ingrassia, the current White House liaison to the Department of Homeland Security, to lead the Office of Special Counsel, which examines public corruption.
Some social media speculation is that the president is cutting billions of dollars in funding to the Ivy League institution because it rejected his son as a student.