Trump poised to enact hefty tariffs as second term blitz continues
Published in Political News
President Donald Trump was poised to enact hefty tariffs against Mexico and Canada as early as the end of next week as he continued a blitz of right-wing policy priorities on day two of his historic second term.
After signing a first-day blizzard of executive orders cracking down on immigration and transgender rights and granting pardons to hundreds of Jan. 6 rioters, Trump signaled that he had no intention of taking his foot off the gas.
Trump, who capped a stunning political comeback to be sworn into office as the 47th president, started his first full day back in the White House with a National Prayer Service at the Washington National Cathedral.
He wound up grimly sitting through a stern rebuke from Bishop Mariann Budde, who called on him to have mercy on undocumented immigrants and LGBTQ people who have been targeted by his orders.
Then he met with Republican congressional leaders at the White House as the GOP tries to push through parts of Trump’s agenda that require congressional approval with only a tiny majority in the House and a small edge in the Senate.
He also was set to preside over a White House announcement billed as a massive artificial intelligence infrastructure investment by major corporations including OpenAI.
The president said late Monday he would impose 25% tariffs against Mexico and Canada, citing the close allies’ failure to meet his vague preinauguration demands for crackdowns on border crossings and drugs.
Trump falsely claimed foreign entities would pay the new taxes, but in fact American importers will foot the bill, which would likely result in higher prices on hundreds of billion dollars of goods U.S. consumers buy every day.
The new president has also suggested a blanket tariff on all imported goods and even bigger taxes on products made in China, although he hasn’t given details.
All the trading partners, including Mexico and Canada, say they would be forced to retaliate with tariffs on American exports that would likely harm U.S. manufacturing and agriculture and spark a tit-for-tat trade war.
Meanwhile, the first of hundreds of violent extremists convicted of storming the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, began celebrating their release from federal prisons after Trump pardoned them or commuted their sentences.
He even freed white nationalists imprisoned for orchestrating the violent attack aimed at keeping Trump in power after he lost the 2020 election to former President Joe Biden.
Enrique Tarrio, the leader of the Proud Boys, was expected to get a hero’s welcome when he returns home to Miami after being freed from a Louisiana prison Tuesday.
For undocumented immigrants, Trump’s first days in office were marked by growing fear and uncertainty as administration officials vowed to start implementing hard-line day one executive orders that could lead to the deportation of more than 10 million people.
Trump has vowed to use the military to help stop asylum seekers and undocumented immigrants from crossing the southern border and to enlist the support of local law enforcement to round up millions of foreign nationals who do not have the paperwork required to live and work in the U.S.
He also ordered federal officials to stop issuing American citizenship documents to the newborn children of undocumented immigrants starting in late February.
That edict would effectively end birthright citizenship, which Trump says incentivizes illegal immigration. But birthright citizen is enshrined in the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, leading many legal analysts to predict it would not withstand certain legal challenges.
New York Attorney General Letitia James joined a coalition of 18 states that quickly filed suit to block the measure, calling it blatantly unconstitutional.
“This fundamental right to birthright citizenship, rooted in the 14th Amendment and born from the ashes of slavery, is a cornerstone of our nation’s commitment to justice,” James said. “Our Constitution is not open to reinterpretation by executive order or presidential decree.”
So far, Trump has done less on the foreign policy front, although he repeated his improbable campaign pledges to retake the Panama Canal and force Greenland to become part of the U.S.
He has apparently given up on his claim that he could end the Russian invasion of Ukraine in just 24 hours and conceded that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict won’t be easy to solve despite the hostage release and Gaza ceasefire brokered by Biden in the final days of his administration.
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