Trump, tariff and Presidential approval
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
The most recent Harvard CAPS/Harris poll found 49% of registered voters approved of Trump’s job performance, compared to 52% last month in same poll.
From USA TODAY
Trump has announced a sweeping tariff plan that's to take effect in the coming week.
From USA Today
Trump announced a minimum tariff of 10% on global imports, with the tax rate running much higher on products from certain countries like China and those from the European Union.
From U.S. News & World Report
Read more on News Digest
The Trump administration’s aggressive and fast-paced effort to advance its immigration agenda has exposed existing challenges with a dated system and raised concerns that authorities are flouting due process to ram deportations through.
Posts claiming that President Donald Trump had pledged to end dual citizenship are circulating on social media.
8h
Hollywood Unlocked on MSNFederal Judge Orders Donald Trump Administration To Bring Back Maryland Father They Mistakenly Deported To El Salvador Mega PrisonA Barack Obama-appointed federal judge has ordered the Donald Trump administration to bring back the Maryland father they mistakenly deported to an El Salvador mega prison. RELATED: Donald Trump Administration Admits They Accidentally Sent A Maryland Father To El Salvador Mega Prison And Now They Can’t Get Him Back As we previously shared,
The Trump administration’s escalating efforts to suppress and retaliate against public dissent present a difficult question for noncitizens living in the United States who want to protest the president’s policies.
The world is reacting to new, sweeping tariffs announced by President Donald Trump on Wednesday -- a date his administration called "Liberation Day."Mass layoffs began on Tuesday at the Department of Health and Human Services,
As the economy teeters on the brink, the president is banking on his hardline immigration policies more than ever.
Amid Donald Trump's illegal immigration crackdown, Louisiana state and local police play a narrow role in federal arrest and deportation efforts.
The chamber voted 52-48 to begin debate on a multitrillion-dollar plan that would cut taxes, boost spending for immigration enforcement and the military, and raise the debt limit.