Supreme Court doesn't rule on tariffs
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Donald Trump, Greenland and tariffs
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Politicians talk a lot about tariffs, and much of what they say boils down to a simple question: Who pays? President Trump has insisted repeatedly that foreign countries will foot the bill for American tariffs.
President Donald Trump has turned tariffs into the centerpiece of his economic strategy, and in 2026 the policy will bite even harder. The new schedule of import taxes, paired with promised $2,000 "tariff dividend" checks, is reshaping who pays more at the ...
President Donald Trump says US government will give Americans $2,000 checks in 2026, says Congress might not have to OK the spending.
Stockpiling bought consumers some time, but Trump's tariffs are pushing up prices across retail now.
No matter where you doom-scroll, your news feed is most likely filled with tariff talk and the ramifications of the resulting trade war. However, in all the noise, it’s easy to get lost in the complicated back-and-forth. What you need is a simple ...
After Trump gave his approval to a sweeping bipartisan sanctions bill targeting Moscow, questions are mounting over whether India could soon find itself facing an unprecedented trade penalty.
To borrow from the caption for The Herald Editorial Board’s Nov. 15 editorial (“Public opinion on Trump’s tariffs may matter most), I wouldn’t mind chiming in on the subject myself. Here’s what I can’t grasp: Simply, why is it that the ...
Set to replace the two-decade-old NEP notified in 2005, the draft policy 2026 pushes for the adoption of advanced nuclear technologies, including Small Modular Reactors (SMRs), other small-capacity reactors,
The Court released another slate of SCOTUS opinions on Jan. 14. Still no tariffs ruling. The case is about whether Trump has the power under the law to tariff countries for an indefinite period of time after making a national emergency declaration.