Linda McMahon pulls back the curtain on Trump's plan to dismantle the Department of EducationNew Foto - Linda McMahon pulls back the curtain on Trump's plan to dismantle the Department of Education

DespiteDemocrats protestingPresident Donald Trump's plan to dismantle the Department of Education, Education Secretary Linda McMahon said returning education to the states is a "nonpartisan issue." "I'm not getting push back, because if it were just Democrat states or Republican states that were doing well or doing poorly, that would be one thing, but it's many of the states on both sides of the aisle. That's why this is really a nonpartisan issue," McMahon explained in an exclusive interview at the National Governors Association (NGA) summer meeting. The Education Secretary participated in discussions with governors from both parties at the Colorado Springs, Colo., meeting, and her department announced the release of roughly $6.8 billion in previously frozen federal funds for K-12 programs ahead of her panel discussion with the outgoing NGA chair, Gov. Jared Polis, D-Colo. "It's just incredibly important that if we are going to return education to the states, we have to talk to the governors," McMahon emphasized. "What's meaningful to them? How can we work together? This is both sides of the aisle because, clearly, education is a nonpartisan issue." Trump Administration Releases Over $6B In Frozen Education Funds To The States Trump signed an executive orderearlier this yearto dismantle the Department of Education, fulfilling one of his key campaign promises during the 2024 presidential election. Read On The Fox News App McMahon explained that returning education to the states "just means giving them back the part that is now provided by the federal government, and they're anxious for it." Education Secretary Linda Mcmahon Touts Columbia University's $200M Settlement 'Template' In a joint statement on behalf of the NGA, Polis and incoming NGA chair Gov.Kevin Stitt, R-Ok., said they were "thankful these bipartisan discussions with Secretary McMahon and other key officials during the NGA Summer Meeting led to the distribution of these education funds," adding that they are "proud our advocacy helped secure this vital support for states and districts." The Education Secretary, the former CEO of World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), explained to Fox News Digital that participating in events like NGA, having discussions with governors from both parties and visiting as many states as possible is critical to understanding America's diverse educational landscape. McMahon said she has already visited different types of schools, from charter schools to public schools, to learn the best practices across the country. "Every state does have different needs," McMahon said. "There's no one size fits all, but what I hear with every governor and almost every educator coming in, is what we are stressing, which is literacy." A Department of Education reportreleased earlier this yearrevealed that American students' reading skills have continued to decline since the COVID-19 pandemic, and their math skills have barely improved. Despite the dismal report, McMahon said "the future for education is very bright" because the Trump administration has called attention to the "Nation's Report Card," which reveals "how the United States doesn't compare all that favorably with the rest of the world." "The president is very keen on making sure that those levels rise, so that the United States takes its rightful place as one of the leaders in education in the world," McMahon explained. And when askedhow the Education Secretarywould address teachers who are anxious about the dismantling the Department of Education, McMahon said she is focused on ensuring best practices are carried out nationwide, while empowering states to deliver for teachers' individual needs. "[Teachers] are working with their school boards, they're working with their principals and superintendents and their governors to have the best policies in their states," McMahon said. "This is a win for teachers because governors are already talking about that teachers should be paid fairly, that they should be allowed to innovate in the classroom, that they shouldn't spend their time doing paperwork and regulatory compliance. They should be able to spend that time with the students." "Let's let teachers teach. This is all good," McMahon explained. Original article source:Linda McMahon pulls back the curtain on Trump's plan to dismantle the Department of Education

Linda McMahon pulls back the curtain on Trump's plan to dismantle the Department of Education

Linda McMahon pulls back the curtain on Trump's plan to dismantle the Department of Education DespiteDemocrats protestingPresident Donal...
Republican super PACs bank millions ahead of midterm battlesNew Foto - Republican super PACs bank millions ahead of midterm battles

Republicans are betting that they can defend their slim congressional majorities in next year's midterm elections, and the party's biggest donors are putting their chips on the table, too. New fundraising reports filed Thursday for outside groups show that GOP megadonors are engaged in the fight for Congress, steering $59.2 million to the main two super PACs involved in House and Senate races aligned with GOP leadership, Senate Leadership Fund and the Congressional Leadership Fund, throughout the first six months of the year. The two major super PACs aligned with Democratic congressional leadership, Senate Majority PAC and House Majority PAC, raised $38.6 million combined. The GOP groups had $62 million left in their accounts as of June 30, while the Democratic groups had $35.8 million. And neither those figures nor the totals raised include all of the groups' nonprofit arms, which can also raise unlimited funds but do not have to disclose their donors. While Republicans may have an early advantage in the super PAC money chase, that doesn't necessarily mean they will be able to swamp the airwaves. Democratic candidates have typically raised more money directly for their campaigns than the average Republican candidate has in recent years, riding a wave of small-donor enthusiasm unleashed in response to President Donald Trump's first election in 2016. That candidate-to-candidate financial advantage pays dividends, since candidates can reserve television airtime at lower rates than outside groups. Still, the big hauls from Republican groups are a sign that the party's donors are tuned into the midterm battle ahead, with both groups raising substantially more than the first six months of 2021, the last midterm election cycle. That period was also marked by GOP donors pulling back from Republican causes after the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot. SLF, which is aligned with Senate Majority Leader John Thune, pulled in $26.5 million during the first six months of the year, four times the size of its haul at this point in 2021. CLF, which is aligned with Speaker Mike Johnson, raised $32.7 million, more than double its 2021 haul. The same group of megadonors — hedge fund manager Paul Singer, current United Kingdom Ambassador Warren Stephens, investor Mark Rowan and poultry businessman Ronald Cameron — gave $1 million or more to each of the groups. The biggest checks came frombillionaire Elon Musk,who donated $5 million each to SLF and CLF on June 27, after he had left his role as a White House. Musk, whoalso donated to a pro-Trump super PAC, made his contributions before publicly musing about starting a third party in July. On the Democratic side, HMP saw a 50% increase compared to its 2021 haul, bringing in $21.2 million so far this year. But SMP saw a slight decrease, raising $17.3 million so far. And the groups drew from different big donors. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker gave $1 million to HMP but not SMP, the filings show. And HMP also benefited from Democratic megadonors including Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings and hedge fund manager Stephen Mandel. SMP, meanwhile, had million-dollar donations from software company founder Phillip Ragon, Olan Mills and real estate mogul George Marcus. Senate GOP candidates aren't just going to be boosted by SLF's significant resources; some will benefit from strong fundraising by outside groups specifically devoted to their elections, both in red and swing states. These candidate-specific Republican Senate super PACs have emerged to push back against the Democratic candidates' hard-money advantage. Maine Sen. Susan Collins, the only Republican defending a seat in a state Democrats regularly win statewide, has overcome a big fundraising discrepancy before — her Democratic opponent in 2020, Sarah Gideon, outraised her $75.6 million to $27.8 million between 2019 and 2020, but Collins won that race by almost 9 percentage points. After outraising her top Democratic opponent last quarter, Collins' allied super PAC, Pine Tree Results PAC, reported raising $5.6 million in the first six months of 2025, thanks to some key seven-figure checks from private equity CEO Stephen Schwarzman and New Balance executive James Davis. In Michigan, home to what's expected to be one of the most competitive Senate races of the cycle, a group backing Republican Mike Rogers could help him combatstrong fundraising on the Democratic side. Great Lakes Conservatives Fund, a pro-Rogers group, raised $5.1 million through June, virtually all from oil billionaire Timothy Dunn. In Texas, where Sen. John Cornynfaces a tough GOP primary challengefrom state Attorney General Ken Paxton, Cornyn is trying to counter Paxton's direct fundraising lead with a strong fundraising showing from outside groups. Texans for a Conservative Majority, a super PAC backing Cornyn, raised almost $11 million in the first six months of the year. And Louisiana GOP Sen. Bill Cassidy, who faces a primary challenge from state Treasurer John Fleming, is also getting an outside boost from a group called Louisiana Freedom Fund, which raised $2.5 million over that same time period.

Republican super PACs bank millions ahead of midterm battles

Republican super PACs bank millions ahead of midterm battles Republicans are betting that they can defend their slim congressional majoritie...
In the Epstein scandal, like other Washington storms, the victims are an afterthoughtNew Foto - In the Epstein scandal, like other Washington storms, the victims are an afterthought

unknown content item - Virginia Giuffre endured decades of torment after her alleged abuse by accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and his jailed accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell. Giuffre took her own life earlier this year. "The nightmares of being trafficked never left our sister, ever," Giuffre's brothers said in a statement on Thursday. And even in death, her tragedy continues. Giuffre — who moved to Australia as an adult, but who ultimately couldn't outrun the horror that claimed her life — is again the victim of someone else's scandal. Her horrific experiences in the early 2000s have been dragged into Donald Trump's frantic efforts to squelch controversy over his past friendship with Epstein. She's a photo on the news; she's diminished by the disrespectful language of the president; her name is being dragged into noisy reporter photo-ops. Her desperate past is being excavated again, in countless media accounts, as Trump critics and pundits ask: What did the president know and when did he know it? Giuffre suffered terribly for the abuse she said she suffered at Epstein's hands. And her life was destroyed by media notoriety. She was pictured in a famous photograph with Maxwell and Britain's Prince Andrew, to whom she alleged she was trafficked by Epstein. The prince, who denied all claims against him, concludedan out-of-court settlementwith her in 2022. Now, in another tributary scandal seeded by Epstein's wickedness, Giuffre's dignity is being picked over again. That's because she once worked at Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort, where she encountered Maxwell — who pulled her into Epstein's circle — and who now may have politically pertinent information about the president and her onetime paramour. In this ugly process, Giuffre has become an emblem of wider, regrettable truths about the Epstein case and Washington. Her return to the headlines exemplifies how victims are pulled into Washington's poisoned culture with little thought about the human consequences. Giuffre is just one of the alleged Epstein victims whose private torment is being largely ignored in breathless speculation about how the Epstein drama will impact Trump's presidency. And she's joining the long list of third parties in Washington scandals whose personal stories are shredded and coopted by the bitter maelstroms of the city. There arelegitimate questionsabout Trump's knowledge about the behavior of Epstein, his own hyping of conspiracy theories around the case, and about a politicized Justice Department's clumsy attempt to make it go away. But assessing them in isolation from the plight of the victims, living and dead, risks denying justice and perpetuating the inhumanity they've already suffered. Trump's struggle to extricate himself from a controversy over the Justice Department's refusal to release files on Epstein — that he himself claimed were subject to a huge conspiracy — is reviving a nightmare for survivors. "They're feeling violated again. They're feeling re-victimized again. They are not given the opportunity to heal in private," Randee Kogan, a therapist for some of Epstein's alleged victims, told CNN's John Berman this week. "Everywhere they look, it's on their phone — whether it's a headline, whether it's social media — and they feel like there's nowhere to escape. They can't find peace to heal." Some, like Giuffre, are becoming objectified as their trauma is boiled down to political talking points. This dehumanizing process was demonstrated by Trump this week, when he said he severed his friendship with Epstein because Epstein was poaching employees from Trump's Mar-a -Lago club. Trump acknowledged that Giuffre had worked in the massage parlor there. "He stole people that worked for me," Trump told reporters on Air Force One. Referring to any human like a commodity would be offensive. Doing so about an alleged victim of sex trafficking and abuse is especially so. "She wasn't 'stolen'; she was preyed upon at his property, at President Trump's property," Sky Roberts, one of Giuffre's brothers, told CNN's Kaitlan Collins on Thursday. Trump has not been charged with any wrongdoing in relation to the Epstein case. But the comment posed new questions about the extent of his knowledge about the activities of Epstein and Maxwell. In a court deposition unsealed in 2019, Giuffre said she first met Maxwell at Mar-a-Lago and that Maxwell took her to her initial meeting with Epstein. Giuffre's family told CNN in a statement on Thursday that if their sister was alive she'd be angered that the Trump administration, in an attempt to placate MAGA voters irate over the refusal to release the Epstein files, had sent Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche to speak to Maxwell in Florida last week. "It was shocking to hear President Trump invoke our sister and say that he was aware that Virginia had been 'stolen' from Mar-a-Lago. It makes us ask if he was aware of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's criminal actions," the family said. In the statement, first reported by The Atlantic, the family urged Trump not to pardon Maxwell, who was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2022. The experiences of Maxwell's victims should be front and center as scrutiny mounts over the administration's handling of the drama. Public debate over potential pardons or commutations for her have so far sketched over the pain inflicted by her crimes. The consequences of any attempt to incentivize her to offer information that could be politically helpful to Trump are enormous. Trump has pointed out that he has the constitutional authority to pardon Maxwell and his history of politicizing such powers is one reason Blanche's talks with Maxwell caused controversy. A senior administration official told CNN that the president was not currently considering clemency for her. Roberts said Thursday on "The Source" that Maxwell should spend the rest of her life behind bars. "She deserves to rot in prison where she belongs because of what she has done to my sister and so many other women," Roberts said. As Trump has failed to shake off questions about Epstein and the political heat rises, the voices of abuse survivors have been largely drowned out. Democrats have joineddemands for a full releaseof all the files the government holds about Epstein as they seek to damage Trump, with little thought for the impact of such a step on victims. On MAGA media, the controversy has again highlighted the strange obsession among some right-wing conspiracy theorists with sex crimes, trafficking and abuse, and the false claims that the government is complicit or covering up such activities. Many of the people most vocal in their outrage over sexual abuse ignore how amping up these falsehoods re-traumatizes survivors. The justice that would be deniedif Maxwell were pardonedas part of a political scheme to alleviate Trump's problems took years to secure. When Maxwell was sentenced, US Attorney Damian Williams said she was held accountable for "heinous crimes against children. This sentence sends a strong message that no one is above the law and it is never too late for justice." Maxwell was convicted of recruiting, grooming and abusing victims that she and Epstein knew were under 18 years old, over a period of at least 10 years. Some of the victims were as young as 14. Minor victims, according to the charges, were subjected to sexual abuse that included touching, the use of sex toys and providing sexual massages to Epstein in his residences in New York, Florida and New Mexico, as well as at Maxwell's residence in London. During the trial, Maxwell's lawyers had pushed back at the government's framing of the case, arguing that what prosecutors referred to as "grooming" — for instance, taking victims to the movies or on shopping trips — was lawful behavior. And they sought to minimize arguments that she ran Epstein's household. But at sentencing, Judge Alison Nathanrejected the idea that Maxwell was a proxyfor Epstein's crimes after his death. "Miss Maxwell is not punished in place of Epstein," she said. "Miss Maxwell is being punished for the role that she played." Maxwell did not testify in her own defense before her conviction on five counts, including sex trafficking of a minor. Many of Epstein's alleged victims believe that they've already been repeatedly deprived of justice. Some were dismayed when federal prosecutor Alex Acosta in 2008 gave the disgraced financier a lenient plea deal under which Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges of soliciting and procuring a minor for prostitution. Acosta, who served as Trump's first-term Labor secretary, was later accused of "poor judgment" in a Justice Department report. Victims also lost their chance of a day in court with Epstein after he took his own life in prison. "He took away the chance I had at having the future I had envisioned for myself as a young girl. And I think many of us here today will never fully heal from that pain," one victim, identified as Jane Doe No. 4, said in court after Epstein's death. Epstein's return to the headlines after Trump's administration was caught in the crossfire of conspiracy theories that he and top aides fanned on the campaign trail has made the distress of survivors even more raw. Kogan said that endless news coverage of Epstein and Trump's language dehumanized the women. "They have been trying to heal for 18 years, and every time they're on the road to recovery, something new comes out in the news, something new, a meme in social media, a skit on a TV show, or a stand-up comedian bringing up Epstein. It's everywhere," Kogan said. "When they hear the fact that they're not being humanized, even by the president, it — they feel defeat." Julie K. Brown, a Miami Herald reporter who wrote "Perversion of Justice," a 2021 book about the Epstein case, said she's been speaking to survivors as the scandal intensifies. "They are beside themselves because they don't understand what's going on. Imagine … after all these years, this has turned into an international story once again," Brown told CNN's Jake Tapper on Wednesday. "This is a re-traumatization of what they've always felt, which is that nobody is really listening to them or understanding that this was such a serious crime and a travesty of justice." The dehumanizing of victims and the tendencies of warring political factions to use them as props is nothing new. Those caught in the storm, whether wittingly or unwittingly, suddenly become known to millions, lose control of their stories and reputations, and become the face of the scandal. Monica Lewinsky, a White House intern with whom President Bill Clinton had an affair,spoke recentlyabout how her life blew up in a second when the scandal erupted. "It was a moment where life as I knew it was over," Lewinsky said in an appearance on the "Call Her Daddy" podcast earlier this year. Everyone in the world, it seemed, had an opinion on her personality, her conduct, her reputation and her morals. Lewinsky said she quickly lost control of her narrative in the media storm and was accused of being a "a stalker, a whore (and) mentally unstable." "There was a creation of a version of me that I didn't recognize." A similar process of dehumanizing someone caught in a scandal occurred in the case of Chandra Levy, a former Bureau of Prisons intern who was found murdered in a Washington park in 2002. Photos of the 24-year-old were soon on every television show and newspaper and magazine. Levy's disappearance gained national attention after her parents discovered a connection between her and Gary Condit, who was then a congressman for Levy's California district. Outsiders were soon speculating on Levy's personal life and behavior as rumors flew that she was having an affair with Condit. Condit was never a suspect in the case nor implicated in the apparent Levy homicide, and has for decades denied any involvement in her death. A man was convicted in 2010 of killing Levy and sentenced to 60 years in prison. But thecharges were dismissed in 2016. The man, Ingmar Guandique,was later deportedto his native El Salvador. The crime remains unsolved. But Levy's treatment at the time was a classic case of how someone who had been a private citizen suddenly becomes a helpless cog in the wheel of a Washington nightmare. Levy's image was fixed in the public imagination for millions who never knew what she was like but who all saw a photo of her in a white tank top and jeans. The sudden loss of anonymity and moment when someone's story is no longer their own and was also experienced by Christine Blasey Ford after she accused Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh of an assault that took place decades before his confirmation process in 2018. Kavanaugh denied the accusation. "I had lived a relatively quiet life as a mom, professor, and surfer," Fordwrote in her memoir. "Quite literally overnight, I became a headline news item. With little preparation, my name would be forever encompassed by one image — me in a navy-blue suit I would never normally wear, being sworn in to solemnly tell the truth." Ford experienced how a vicious political spotlight is often used to assail the characters of those caught up in scandals — and the way that the consequential trauma can linger for years afterwards. But as the Epstein scandal shows, the grim dehumanizing of victims and their manipulation for political schemes and goals never ends in Washington. "Here ruining people is considered sport," wrote Clinton administration Deputy White House Counsel Vince Foster in a note found after he took his own life in 1993. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

In the Epstein scandal, like other Washington storms, the victims are an afterthought

In the Epstein scandal, like other Washington storms, the victims are an afterthought unknown content item - Virginia Giuffre endured decade...
Witkoff and Huckabee visit Gaza as Trump comes up with a plan for aidNew Foto - Witkoff and Huckabee visit Gaza as Trump comes up with a plan for aid

As global concern over the hunger crisis in Gaza intensifies, Steve Witkoff, President Donald Trump's special envoy to the Middle East, and U.S. Ambassador toIsraelMike Huckabee, on Friday inspected the U.S. and Israel-backed aid distribution system there. "Special Envoy Witkoff and Ambassador Huckabee will be traveling into Gaza on Friday to inspect the current distribution sites and secure a plan to deliver more food and meet with local Gazans to hear firsthand about this dire situation on the ground," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Thursday. Leavitt said that immediately following the visit, Witkoff and Huckabee would brief Trump in order to "approve a final plan for food and aid distribution into the region." Huckabee postedphotos of the visit on X. This morning I joined@SEPeaceMissionsSteve Witkoff for a visit to Gaza to learn the truth about@GHFUpdatesaid sites. We received briefings from@IDFand spoke to folks on the ground. GHF delivers more than one million meals a day, an incredible feat!pic.twitter.com/GyVK5cwNgZ — Ambassador Mike Huckabee (@USAmbIsrael)August 1, 2025 MORE: White House envoy Witkoff will travel to Gaza on Friday amid hunger crisis Witkoffposted as well on X,saying, "At @POTUS's direction, @USAmbIsrael and I met yesterday with Israeli officials to discuss the humanitarian situation in Gaza. Today, we spent over five hours inside Gaza — level setting the facts on the ground, assessing conditions, and meeting with @GHFUpdates and other agencies. The purpose of the visit was to give @POTUS a clear understanding of the humanitarian situation and help craft a plan to deliver food and medical aid to the people of Gaza." At@POTUS's direction,@USAmbIsraeland I met yesterday with Israeli officials to discuss the humanitarian situation in Gaza. Today, we spent over five hours inside Gaza — level setting the facts on the ground, assessing conditions, and meeting with@GHFUpdatesand other…pic.twitter.com/aCtLuMuhq1 — Special Envoy Steve Witkoff (@SEPeaceMissions)August 1, 2025 The president hinted at a new plan to address humanitarian concerns in Gaza on Monday following a meeting with United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer. "We're going to set up food centers and where the people can walk in and no boundaries. We're not going to have fences," Trump said. He later added that he expected European nations to work with the U.S. on the initiative, and that he expected the plan to be operational "very soon." But so far, both the White House and the State Department have declined to elaborate on the president's comments or provide a basic framework for the new plan. The Trump administration and Israel have backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a controversial American non-profit now charged with distributing most aid that is allowed to enter Gaza. The GHF -- with Israel's approval and despite rejection from the United Nations -- took over most of the aid distribution system in Gaza on May 27, after an 11-week Israeli blockade on all supplies from entering the strip. Israel has long accused Hamas of stealing aid provided by the U.N. -- formerly the main distributor -- and others to fund its militant activity -- claims which Hamas denies. Earlier this month, more than 160 charity groups and NGOs called for the GHF to be shut down, claiming that more than 500 Palestinians had been killed while seeking aid from the organization and that its distribution locations "have become sites of repeated massacres in blatant disregard for international humanitarian law." But the administration has shown no signs of backing away from the GHF, which it has repeatedly touted as the only organization working in Gaza that is able to ensure aid doesn't benefit Hamas. The U.S. has pledged $30 million toward GHF's efforts in Gaza and a U.S. official told ABC News on Wednesday that the money was expected to be distributed to the group within the coming days -- a sign of the administration's continued confidence in the organization. As of now, GHF operates only four distribution sites across Gaza. Trump administration officials have always maintained that its operations could be scaled up, but there's no indication the administration has played any direct role in planning for its expansion. Ahead of his visit to Gaza, Witkoff met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday. Following their discussion, an Israeli official told ABC News that the two had agreed to several tenets related to bringing the war in Gaza to a resolution, including that it was time to consider a ceasefire framework that would free all Israeli hostages, that Hamas must disarm, and that Israel and the U.S. should work together to increase the flow of aid into Gaza even as the conflict continues. Witkoff's visit to Gaza of Friday will mark his second trip to Gaza this year. In late January, when the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas that was negotiated in part by both the Biden and Trump administrations was still in place, Witkoff became the first high-level U.S. official to enter Gaza in more than a decade when he toured an area of the Gaza Strip that was still occupied by the Israeli military. -ABC'S Michelle Stoddart and Will Gretsky contributed to this report.

Witkoff and Huckabee visit Gaza as Trump comes up with a plan for aid

Witkoff and Huckabee visit Gaza as Trump comes up with a plan for aid As global concern over the hunger crisis in Gaza intensifies, Steve Wi...
In historic move, Trump escalates trade battles with sweeping new tariffs around the worldNew Foto - In historic move, Trump escalates trade battles with sweeping new tariffs around the world

WASHNIGTON ―President Donald Trumpsigned anexecutive orderon July 31 imposing sweeping new tariffs on imports from trading partners across the world, escalating an aggressive trade policy aimed at spurring domestic manufacturing in the United States. In addition,Trump took separate action to raise tariffson goods from Canada from 25% to 35%. Thenew reciprocal tariff rates, which will go into effect in seven days, come before an Aug. 1 deadline Trump gave about 180 countries to either reach trade deals with the Trump administration or face higher reciprocal tariffs assigned by the U.S. The new tariff rate for Canada begins Aug. 1. More:Trump to add 25% tariff to Indian imports. Which everyday goods could be impacted? Trump has kept an existing baseline 10% tariff for about 100 countries where the United States exports more goods than it receives. The order applies to 70 other countries. About 40 nations will have a 15% U.S. tariff rate under Trump's order. A senior White House official said these include countries that export slightly more goods to the U.S. than it imports. For another 30 countries, the tariff rates range up to 40% on imports from Loas and Myanmar and 41% on goods for Syria. These are countries where the U.S. has the largest trade deficits. Imports that fall under the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, a trade deal Trump signed during his first term, will remain exempt from the new 35% Canadian tariffs. Trump has said the tariffs on Canada are in retaliation to the flow of fentanyl from the neighboring country to the north. To see the full list of new tariff ratesclick here. Tariffs are taxes on imports paid by companies. Economists warn that tariffs can lead to higher costs for consumers, but Trump and White House officials have pointed to relatively flat inflation since Trump returned to the White House to argue they've proven the skeptics wrong. Trump had previously announced new tariff rates for several countries and reached deals with other nations that include new tariff rates, including Japan (15%), Vietnam (20%), Indonesia (19%), the European Union (15%). More:Trump's trade deal with the EU: What it means for your wallet Not included in Trump's order are two of the United States' largest trading partners, China and Mexico. Trump and Chinese officials have discussed extending a 90-day tariff truce that the two sides struck in May in which both countries held off on imposing massive, triple-digit tariffs on imports on one another. Trump on July 31 said he's giving Mexicoanother 90 days to come to a long-term agreement with the United States to avoid higher tariffs. In the meantime, Mexican imports will still be levied with a 25% tariff that Trump imposed over the flow of fentanyl from the country. Even steeper"reciprocal" tariffson countries that Trump initially imposed on April 2 ‒but soon after paused for 90 daysamid market turbulence ‒ were set to go back into effect July 9. But Trump on July 7extended the deadline to Aug. 1to continue trade negotiations with some countries. During the pause, imports from most countries have been subject to a 10% baseline tariff. Trump has taken an on-and-off-again approach to his tariff regime ‒ routinely threatening new fees on goods that he retreats from later. His past efforts haveearned him a nicknameamong Wall Street financial analysts called "TACO trade," an acronym that stands for "Trump always chickens out." Yet Trump insisted he planned to follow through on his Aug. 1 deadline ‒ and now he has. Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump signs order imposing sweeping new tariffs across the world

In historic move, Trump escalates trade battles with sweeping new tariffs around the world

In historic move, Trump escalates trade battles with sweeping new tariffs around the world WASHNIGTON ―President Donald Trumpsigned anexecut...

 

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