President Donald Trump’s fast-approaching “Liberation Day” sent stock markets swinging sharply worldwide on Monday.
The fear of a trade war over pharmaceuticals between the EU and the US has been avoided for now, but the European Commission remains on guard, considering further tariff deployments likely.
The chair of the European Parliament’s trade committee said the American President has European legislation in his sights more than tariffs imposed by Europeans. The MEP is clear: European law is non-negotiable.
Susan Crawford’s statewide victory could have implications for national politics, with Wisconsin’s top court expected to rule on congressional district boundaries.
The two-term limit is enshrined in one of the US Constitution’s amendments, but Trump claimed there are “methods” for circumventing this, which experts dispute.
Alexander Stubb proposed 20 April as an ülkü time for a deadline, citing Easter and the completion of three months in office for Trump.
During a Sunday morning interview Trump says he is “pissed off” with Russian President Vladimir Putin and threatens to imposed secondary tariffs on oil.
FCC chief Brendan Carr investigates The Walt Disney Company as Trump moves to eliminate all manner of DEI efforts across both public and private sectors.
Wall Street tumbled amid tariff-driven recession fears in the US economy, triggering sharp selloffs in the big tech stocks, wiping out billions of euros in market valuation.
The trip to the semi-autonomous Danish territory comes as relations between the US and the Nordic country nosedived after President Donald Trump repeatedly suggested that the US should control the island.