Tag: Donald Trump

  • Mexico, Canada trade deal gives Trump China leverage

    President Trump’s ability to wangle a new deal from NAFTA partners Mexico and Canada will give the White House leverage to take a harder line in the escalating trade war with China, administration bac

    President Trump’s ability to wangle a new deal from NAFTA partners Mexico and Canada will give the White House leverage to take a harder line in the escalating trade war with China, administration backers said Monday.

    “Now the focus turns to China, where President Trump can resume his negotiations from a position of strength,” said Chris Garcia, a former Commerce Department deputy director.

    He said Monday that the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement is a blow to Beijing because it will create more hurdles for Chinese-made auto parts to enter the U.S. market and undercut Beijing’s divide-and-conquer strategy.

    Trade analysts said a provision in the agreement dealing with currency manipulation gives Mr. Trump a template to attack Beijing for what critics say is a long pattern of driving down the yuan to benefit Chinese exporters.

    Although it’s unclear when the next round of U.S.-Chinese trade talks will occur — Beijing halted negotiations last week after Mr. Trump ordered tariffs on a fresh $200 billion in Chinese imports — Mr. Trump clearly signaled that he is ready to play hardball.

    “It’s a privilege for China to do business with us,” Mr. Trump told reporters at the White House while announcing the deal with Canada and Mexico.

    “China wants to talk very badly,” said Mr. Trump, crediting his willingness to use tariffs and other measures to rebalance the trading relationship between the globe’s two biggest economies. “Frankly, it’s too early to talk. Can’t talk now because they’re not ready, because they’ve been ripping us for so many years.”

    Some administration officials argued that the president now has momentum on his side as he ramps up talks with China and Japan on new trade deals.

    “The dominoes are falling, and it is good news for U.S. farmers,” Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said in a statement.

    But some analysts predicted that, as tumultuous as the USMCA negotiations were over recent months, a breakthrough on trade with China is likely to be even more elusive.

    “Unfortunately, the China story is a lot more complicated,” said Luis Costa, a top strategy analyst with Citibank.

    Mr. Costa argued in an interview on CNBC that the Trump administration’s immediate goals for the trade talks with China are not entirely clear.

    “What does the U.S. really want to achieve in the short term so we can finalize and mute the noise? We don’t quite know,” he said. “So I think that the story will probably be with us for years, not months.”

    Chinese officials had no immediate response to the Canada deal, and stock markets in Hong Kong and on the mainland were closed Monday. Other Asian stock markets were mixed as traders struggled to understand the deal.

    Complex problem

    China poses a problem of far greater magnitude and complexity for U.S. trade negotiators. In addition to breaking down traditional trade and tariff barriers, Washington is demanding changes to China’s rules on such matters as technology-sharing and intellectual property rights.

    Although Mr. Trump likes to highlight China’s recent economic and financial woes, Chinese President Xi Jinping faces far fewer domestic pressures to cut a deal than do the democratically elected leaders of Canada and Mexico.

    The U.S. is China’s largest single export market, taking in just under a fifth of all Chinese exports. The U.S. is the third-largest importer into China, trailing South Korea and Japan.

    The planned U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, assuming the three countries ratify it, takes off the table any hopes China may have had of enlisting Mexico City and Ottawa in a broad alliance against Mr. Trump’s trade agenda. The breakthrough over the weekend could strengthen Mr. Trump’s hand by aligning the U.S., Mexico and Canada as three-way trade partners, with China on the outside looking in.

    One area of the agreement that may have an immediate impact for China is the export of car and auto parts to the U.S. The agreement effectively caps imports from Canada and Mexico at 2.4 million vehicles and $90 billion worth of auto parts annually. Anything above that triggers a 25 percent tariff.

    The agreement also requires 75 percent of the value of vehicles sold in the U.S. to be produced within the NAFTA market and stipulates that 40 percent to 45 percent of a vehicle’s value be made in areas paying at least $16 an hour.

    A report Monday by Investors Business Daily maintained that “China is a prime target of the new auto part restrictions” that aim to “curb the use of components produced outside North America.”

    “This is a major victory for the U.S. in re-orienting the supply chain away from Southeast Asia and back to North America …,” Mr. Garcia said. “China was using Mexico to game the system.”

    Other parts of the accord also appear to have China clearly in mind. Alexandre Moreau, a public policy analyst at the Montreal Economic Institute, pointed to a provision in the agreement that may effectively block Canada and Mexico from cutting their own bilateral trade deals with China and other major trading powers.

    “That’s something that really worries me,” Mr. Moreau said in an interview on CNBC.

    Others expressed hope that the USMCA will result in such a boon for North America that such concerns are irrelevant.

    Mr. Garcia, the former U.S. Commerce Department official, argued in remarks circulated to reporters that the deal is “an effort to reorient the supply chain to North America.”

    “The de-industrialization of the United States ended last night,” he said. “This is a major victory for the U.S. in re-orienting the supply chain away from Southeast Asia and back to North America.”

  • Donald Trump laughed at by world leaders as he boasted of his accomplishments

    President Donald Trump is highlighting U.S. gains under his watch as he opens his address to the U.N. General Assembly — and is getting a laugh.

    President Donald Trump is highlighting U.S. gains under his watch as he opens his address to the U.N. General Assembly — and is getting a laugh.

    Trump told leaders from around the world Tuesday the American economy is “booming like never before” and his administration has accomplished more in less than two years than almost any other administration. His boast elicited laughter from the scores of heads of state and delegates in the audience for the speech.

    Trump responded by saying, “I didn’t expect that reaction, but that’s OK.”

    Trump says the U.S. is a “stronger, safer and richer country” than when he took office in January 2017. He says “we are standing up for America and for the American people, and we are also standing up for the world.”

  • Trump teams with U.N. to battle drugs: ‘We commit to fighting the drug epidemic together’

    President Trump on Monday led a United Nation’s panel on combating the world drug crisis, saying a robust international effort could save millions of lives.

    President Trump on Monday led a United Nation’s panel on combating the world drug crisis, saying a robust international effort could save millions of lives.“Today we commit to fighting the drug epidemic together,” Mr. Trump told the panel, part of the U.N. General Assembly meeting in New York this week.Mr. Trump often clashes with the U.N. but the fight against illegal drug trafficking was an area where he sees eye-to-eye with the international body.The Trump administration pulled out of the U.N.’s Human Rights Council and the UNESCO cultural program.“I’ve always said the United Nations has tremendous potential and that potential is being met. Slowly but surely it is being met,” the president said.The president noted that cocaine and opium production reached an all-time high and the number of drug-related deaths around the world increased 60 percent between 2000 and 2015.He called the death toll “absolutely terrible.”“As we know, illicit drugs are linked to organized crime, illegal financial flows, corruption and terrorism,” he said. “It is vital for public health and national security that we fight drug addiction and stop all forms of trafficking and smuggling that provide the financial lifeblood for vicious transnational cartels.”

  • Trump Supreme Court pick: Why is the US top court so important?

    Nine Supreme Court Justices Image copyright Getty Images Image caption The nine justices before Anthony Kennedy announced his retirement

    The US is currently undergoing the process to appoint a replacement to Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, who announced his retirement earlier this year. So why is this a big deal?

    Given the immense impact the US Supreme Court has on US political life, nominees always face tough questions from the Senate during any confirmation hearing.

    President Donald Trump’s nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, is no exception.

    So how might his pick change the nation’s high court?

    Who are the current justices? Meet the Supremes

    What does the Supreme Court do?

    The highest court in the US is often the final word on highly contentious laws, disputes between states and the federal government, and final appeals to stay executions.

    Does the court matter globally?

    US research suggests that the influence of the Supreme Court abroad has diminished over the past two decades, as court systems elsewhere in the world develop and US influence in general wanes.

    Fewer courts internationally cite US Supreme Court opinions, increasingly citing the European Court of Human Rights and other national supreme courts.

    In 2016 a Supreme Court decision on emissions from coal-fired power plants on US soil threatened the Paris Climate Agreement, but enough other countries ratified the treaty for it to come into force.

    Donald Trump’s controversial travel ban, which affects Middle East countries designated as terror-prone, was cemented this week by the Supreme Court, with the outcome affecting millions internationally.

    And back in 2000, the Supreme Court decided the outcome of the presidential election between George W Bush and Al Gore – a decision which more recent history shows still has a significant impact around the world.

    The court could in theory be asked to rule on legal challenges to international trade agreements, such as the controversial Trans-Pacific Partnership, although TPP was revoked by Mr Trump using an executive order.

  • Trump disputes Puerto Rico hurricane death toll

    A man rides his bicycle through a damaged road in Toa Alta, west of San Juan, Puerto Rico Image copyright AFP/Getty Image caption The US territory has asked Congress for $139bn in recovery funds

    US President Donald Trump is disputing that nearly 3,000 people died in Puerto Rico after the island was hit by two hurricanes last year.

    “3000 people did not die in the two hurricanes that hit Puerto Rico,” Mr Trump wrote on Twitter, without offering evidence for the claim.

    He added that Democrats had inflated the official death toll to “make me look as bad as possible”.

    The official figure was released last month after an independent study.

    On Thursday, Mr Trump wrote in a pair of tweets that Democrats were attacking him “when I was successfully raising Billions of Dollars to help rebuild Puerto Rico”.

    Where does the official death toll come from?

    A George Washington University study in July found that 2,975 people died in Puerto Rico as a result of Hurricane Maria, which struck the island territory in September 2017.

    The governor of Puerto Rico, who commissioned the research, said he accepted the estimate as official.

    The study concluded that the initial death toll of 64 only included those killed directly by hurricanes Maria and Irma – either by drowning, flying debris or building collapse.

    George Washington University also counted those who died in the six months following the storm as a result of poor healthcare provision and a lack of electricity and clean water.

    Puerto Rico hurricane death toll jumps Anger at Trump Puerto Rico ‘success’ claim

    Repeated power cuts also led to an increased number of deaths from diabetes and sepsis.

    US hurricane a looming ‘disaster’

    Last May, Harvard University public health researchers estimated the death toll was even higher.

    They said about 4,600 people died in Puerto Rico in the aftermath of the hurricane from delayed medical care.

    Media playback is unsupported on your device

    Media captionMonths after Maria, many on this US island still suffered in the dark

    What have Puerto Rican officials said?

    In response, the Mayor of Puerto Rico’s capital San Juan, Carmen Yulin Cruz, tweeted: “Mr Trump you can try and bully us with your tweets BUT WE KNOW OUR LIVES MATTER.”

    “You will never take away our self respect. Shame on you!”

    Earlier this week, after Mr Trump hailed the US response in Puerto Rico as “tremendous” and “an incredible, unsung success”.

    Ms Cruz shot back: “If he thinks the death of 3,000 people is a success God help us all.”

    Last month she described Mr Trump’s handling of Maria as a “stain on his presidency”.

    Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rosello said in a statement this week that Maria was “the worst natural disaster in our modern history.

    “Our basic infrastructure was devastated, thousands of our people lost their lives and many others still struggle.”

    Puerto Rico, an unincorporated territory of the US, is home to some 3.3 million people.

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  • Trump’s claim of success in Puerto Rico hurricane response derided

    New York Democratic primary winner Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, said: “Some of my [Puerto Rico] family just got power a few weeks ago. People are developing respiratory issues partly due to airborne fungal spores from lack of proper cleanup. The admin’s response to Puerto Rico has been a disaster.”

    Some Trump supporters on social media accepted there had been failures but said the president had done all he could and that it was Puerto Rican officials who were to blame.

    What happened in Hurricane Maria?

    Maria made landfall in mid-September last year having just been downgraded to a category four hurricane, with winds of 140 mph (225 km/h) and driving rain.

    It caused catastrophic damage to the north-eastern Caribbean and was the most intense cyclone worldwide in 2017.

    Six graphics that sum up Puerto Rico disaster

    Infrastructure was severely damaged in Puerto Rico and the territory struggled to make repairs to the power grid, only completing the work 11 months later.

    Maria was estimated to have caused $100bn (£77bn) in damage.

    For long the government there listed the death toll at only 64, although it acknowledged it was probably much higher.

    The island’s authorities finally accepted a revised toll of 2,975 after a government-commissioned report by experts from George Washington University.

    This counted those who died in the six months following the storm as a result of poor healthcare and a lack of electricity and clean water. Repeated power cuts also led to an increased number of deaths from diabetes and sepsis.

    The report said that those from poorer backgrounds in Puerto Rico were 45% more likely to have been killed in the aftermath of the hurricane.

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  • US President Donald Trump’s Eire consult with cancelled

    US President Donald Trump Image copyright Reuters

    US President Donald Trump’s discuss with to the Republic of eire has been cancelled, Irish national broadcaster RTÉ has pronounced.

    The White Area had announced the talk over with earlier in September.

    Mr Trump was expected to visit his golfing route in Doonbeg, County Clare, and Dublin on the weekend of 10-11 November.

    It was to be his first consult with because turning into president in 2016.

    RTÉ has mentioned that sources in each Ireland and the United States Of America have indicated that the discuss with is off.

    Image caption a visit to eire used to be raised by Taoiseach Leo Varadkar all over his shuttle to the u.s. in March

    Mr Trump is because of commute to Paris on Martinmas for commemorations marking the one centesimal anniversary of the armistice that ended World Struggle One.

    His consult with to ireland was to coincide with that shuttle. it is no longer identified if he’ll nonetheless trip to France.

    Politicians and activists in Ireland had indicated they’d grasp protests all through Mr Trump’s talk over with.

    Brendan Howlin, the leader of the Labour Birthday Party within the Republic of ireland, stated that Mr Trump used to be “no family member of democracy or human rights”.

    The Fairway Birthday Party had called on the Irish executive to cancel the consult with.

    Image copyright PA Symbol caption Donald Trump owns Trump Doonbeg, a golfing hotel in County Clare

    The U.s. president owns a golf resort in County Clare, Trump Doonbeg, which he bought in February 2014.

    He closing visited Doonbeg in Would Possibly 2014 and was once due to go to again a few months ahead of the u.s. presidential election, in the summer time of 2016, however later shelved the plan.

    Taoiseach Leo Varadkar invited Mr Trump to ireland right through a gathering on the St Patrick’s Day celebrations in Washington in March.

    In 2017, Mr Varadkar’s predecessor, Enda Kenny, additionally extended a suggestion for the united states President to return and talk over with.

  • ICC ‘undeterred’ by way of US sanctions danger

    Image copyright Reuters Image caption US workforce in Afghanistan might be subjected to ICC investigations

    Mr Bolton stated neither Afghanistan nor any govt signatory to the ICC’s statute had requested an investigation.

    However, ICC prosecutors also have the facility to take unbiased action, despite the fact that any prosecutions should be licensed by means of a panel of judges.

    The 2nd space Mr Bolton addressed used to be the Palestinian transfer to deliver US best friend Israel earlier than the ICC over allegations of human rights abuses in Gaza and the occupied West Bank – a transfer pushed aside by Israel as politicised.

    Mr Bolton said: “we can no longer co-function with the ICC. we can provide no assistance to the ICC. we will be able to not join the ICC. we can let the ICC die on its own. in spite of everything, for all intents and functions, the ICC is already useless to us.”

    What did the ICC say in reaction?

    The ICC launched a statement following Mr Bolton’s speech, stressing it was once an “impartial and impartial judicial establishment” and that it didn’t intrude until it used to be absolutely essential.

    Symbol copyright Reuters Symbol caption The court in the Hague used to be founded in 2002 by means of a treaty referred to as the Rome Statute

    “The court’s jurisdiction is topic to the principle jurisdiction of states themselves to research and prosecute allegations of these crimes and bring justice to the affected groups. it is only whilst the states concerned fail to achieve this at all or truly that the ICC will exercise jurisdiction.” the statement said.

    “The ICC, as a court docket of regulation, will continue to do its paintings undeterred, according with those ideas and the overarching idea of the rule of law.”

    What steps may the united states take?

    ICC judges and prosecutors can be barred from coming into the us and their budget in the us can be targeted.

    “we can prosecute them in the u.s. felony system. we will do the similar for any corporate or state that assists an ICC investigation of usa citizens,” Mr Bolton said.

    More “binding, bilateral agreements” would be signed to forestall countries submitting US electorate to the court docket’s jurisdiction.

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  • Trump receives ‘warm’ letter from Kim about new summit

    Kim Jong-un and Donald Trump at the June summit in Singapore Image copyright Reuters Image caption Time for a sequel to this summer’s blockbuster summit?

    North Korea’s Kim Jong-un has written to US President Donald Trump inquiring for a observe-as much as their ancient summit, the White Space says.

    The US says it is already taking a look at scheduling a new assembly.

    White Space spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said the “very warm” letter confirmed Pyongyang’s “endured commitment to take care of denuclearisation”.

    Negotiations at the matter appeared to have stalled after the 2 leaders’ historic summit in Singapore in June.

    “the primary purpose of the letter was once to request and look to agenda every other assembly with the president, which we’re open to and are already within the strategy of co-ordinating that,” Ms Sanders said.

    Symbol copyright AFP Symbol caption Lots of troops marched within the parade

    Mr Trump himself thanked the North Korean leader by the use of Twitter, announcing the parade was once “a large and really certain observation from North Korea.”

    “Thank You to Chairman Kim. We Will each turn out everybody fallacious!”

    Did Trump and Kim truly reach anything else in Singapore? What have been the effects of the Trump-Kim summit? Why did Trump mention N Korea’s seashores? Trump Kim summit: Win-win or a Kim win?

    At their June summit in Singapore, the 2 leaders signed a imprecise agreement to paintings against the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula.

    however it did not come with a timeline, main points or any mechanisms to make sure the process.

    High-degree talks and visits have persisted, but the most up-to-date scheduled go back and forth via US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo used to be referred to as off at the closing minute.

    each side have also blamed one another for stalling negotiations whilst insisting that they have been dedicated to the method.

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