The largest beneficiary of America’s tariff-induced meltdown has been China—which has used past Western crises to stake out maximalist positions in international affairs.
As world leaders wrung their hands over President Donald Trump's sweeping tariff announcements, Argentine president Javier ...
President Donald Trump has invoked a rarely used 1798 law that gives a president immense powers to arrest and deport ...
Rising tensions within the GOP as top senators, including Ted Cruz, criticize President Trump's tariffs. Cruz warns of ...
While the world’s leaders were wringing their hands over Trump’s sweeping tariffs on U.S. imports, Argentina’s Javier Milei ...
Most U.S. trading partners have emphasized they hope negotiations can help resolve trade friction with Washington. Japanese ...
As Trump rattles up the world, things are heating up domestically for Milei.
US imports heavily from China, Vietnam, Mexico, Canada, and other nations for daily necessities, including clothes, toys, electronics, and food items. New tariffs will increase the cost of these goods ...
Uruguayan President Yamandú Orsi Friday underscored his country's strengths, such as legal certainty, reliability in keeping ...
A federal judge blocked the Trump administration's attempt to dismantle the Inter-American Foundation, an independent agency ...
A federal judge agreed on Friday to block the Trump administration from dismantling an independent agency that distributes ...
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