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Korea JoongAng Daily on MSNAnger against Trump is forecast to cost the U.S. international visitorsAnger over the Trump administration’s tariffs and rhetoric will likely cause international travel to the United States to fall even further than expected this year, an influential travel forecasting company said Tuesday.
President Donald Trump is expected to announce sweeping new tariffs Wednesday, which he has dubbed “Liberation Day.” The move comes after the administration has already imposed or announced tariffs on steel and aluminum imports and some products coming from China,
President Donald Trump said recently that he wants the 2019 Kansas City Chiefs to come to the White House after COVID-19 kept them from making the trip.
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On Friday, the Labor Department issues the jobs report for March. According to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet, it is expected to show that employers added 125,000 jobs last month, down from 151,000 in February and an average 168,000 a month in 2024. The unemployment rate is forecast to tick up to a still-low 4.2%.
Everything from apparel to wine is in Trump’s crosshairs. And low-and-middle-income Americans will face the brunt of the tariffs.
Anger over the Trump administration’s tariffs and rhetoric will likely cause international travel to the U.S. to fall even further than expected this year, an influential travel forecasting company said Tuesday.
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Republican Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida, a top House ally of President Trump, hauls in $12 million in fundraising in the first 35 days since announcing his 2026 run for governor, his team says.
U.S. stocks are swerving through another shaky day of trading, with uncertainty still high about just what President Donald Trump will announce about tariffs on his “Liberation Day.”
Japan's factory output rose at a better than expected pace last month, driven by increases in production machinery and electronics parts, but a slowdown in retail sales pointed to the growing strains for an economy facing rising external risks.
We’ve gotten used to seeing a president’s first 100 days as a gauge of progress and a benchmark for history. (Thanks, Franklin Roosevelt.) To understand the early days of President Trump’s second term, however, when so much has happened so quickly, there is an alternative milestone to consider.