Trump escapes to Florida after setting world economy on fire

The article discusses President Donald Trump’s recent proclamation of meaningful reciprocal tariffs aimed at foreign countries taxing U.S. imports, which have resulted in a severe downturn in the global economy. Following the announcement, Trump traveled to Miami for a LIV Golf dinner and plans to spend the weekend at his Mar-a-lago estate in Florida. The tariffs, announced at a Rose Garden event, include a 10% baseline tariff and could affect up to 90 countries, triggering a sharp decline in stock markets.

Despite the economic turmoil, Trump expressed optimism about the potential for a booming market, claiming that huge sums of money would flow into the U.S. His management is working to mitigate the uncertainty caused by these tariffs, with officials stating that long-term benefits will outweigh short-term struggles. Though, former officials have raised concerns about the potential negative impacts on consumers.

Global leaders have reacted with surprise and concern over Trump’s tariffs, with some countries, like China, indicating they will retaliate. European officials have also voiced apprehension about the economic repercussions of his tax policies. Trump insists that foreign nations have exploited the U.S. economically for years and believes these measures are necessary for fair trade.


Trump escapes to Florida after setting world economy on fire

President Donald Trump is heading to Miami to appear at a LIV Golf dinner on Thursday, just one day after announcing severe reciprocal tariffs that have rocked the global economy.

He will later head to Mar-a-Lago, his Florida estate, for the weekend, but the jaunt comes earlier than his normal Friday flights down south.

At a Rose Garden event Wednesday, Trump revealed a 10% baseline tariff on countries that tax U.S. imports. It will go into effect on Saturday. Additionally, roughly 60 to 90 countries will be hit with even higher reciprocal tariffs that go into effect next Wednesday.

In response, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1,300 points, while the Nasdaq Composite fell 5%, and the S&P 500 dropped 4%. Global companies also took a market hit, with Nike and Lululemon shares falling 13%. Stellantis is temporarily laying off some 900 U.S. workers at its Canadian and Mexican auto assembly plants.

Trump largely avoided the limelight Thursday morning and early afternoon, leaving the work of defending his actions to others.

But before he departed from the White House for Florida, he briefly spoke about the tariffs with reporters. “I think it’s going very well,” Trump said, according to a pool report.

He also claimed that the United States will “have [$6 trillion or $7 trillion] coming into our country.”

“The markets are going to boom,” and “the country is going to boom,” Trump said.

Trump officials are furiously working to tamp down the uncertainty and financial pain that could deepen over the following weeks if the tariffs are not retracted.

“What I’d ask folks to appreciate here is that we’re not going to fix things overnight,” Vice President JD Vance said Thursday morning on Fox News’s Fox and Friends.

“We know people are struggling,” he continued. “We’re fighting as quickly as we can to fix what was left to us, but it’s not going to happen immediately. But we really do believe that if we pursue the right deregulation, we pursue those energy cost-reducing policies, yes, people are going to see it in their pocketbook.”

“I know we’re hearing from countries that are kind of complaining about what’s happening, but I have a chart,” Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told reporters Thursday afternoon at the White House.

The chart, according to Rollins, shows the exports of other countries, including India, Taiwan, and Japan.

“This is the average: 14%. Well, down here, you’ve got little bitty United States of America, right? I mean, this is what he’s trying to fix,” Rollins said before claiming that farmers and ranchers would adjust to uncertainty. “This will be a short time of uncertainty, and then we’ll move back to the prosperity that this president has envisioned, that he is so bold and so willing to fight for.”

However, a former Trump administration official pushed back against the comments from current officials.

“I think the impact on consumers is going to be very, very high,” a former trade official from the first Trump administration said. “Politically, American voters have been willing to entertain the president’s sort of policies in this area because I think, in some ways, those in particular that voted for him, they align with this rhetoric that countries haven’t been treating us fairly.”

World leaders expressed shock and disbelief at Trump’s levies but were cautious in responding with retaliation.

“China firmly opposes this and will take countermeasures to safeguard its own rights and interests,” a statement from the nation’s Commerce Ministry reads.

China was hit with a 34% levy in addition to a previous 20% tariff Trump imposed against the Asian nation.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called Trump’s tariffs “a major blow to the world economy.”

French President Emmanuel Macron pressed companies to pause their investments in the U.S.

LIBERATION DAY: TRUMP UNVEILS RECIPROCAL TARIFFS, SAYS US WILL NO LONGER BE ‘RAPED’ BY TRADING PARTNERS

“What would the message be of having big European players that invest billions in the American economy at the same time they are hitting us?” Macron said.

Trump, however, argues that it was foreign countries that “have taken advantage of us for many, many years” instead.



" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."
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