
Donald Trump said on Monday that the Federal Reserve should cut rates.
“The slow moving Fed should cut rates,” Trump reiterated in a post on his social media platform Truth Social.
But Kevin Hassett, director of the US national economic council, yesterday denied that the tariffs were part of a strategy by Trump to crash financial markets to pressure the US federal reserve to cut interest rates, insisting there were would be no “political coercion” of the central bank.
Goods imported from dozens of countries and territories are now going to be taxed at sharply higher rates, and that is expected to drive up the costs of everything from cars to clothes to computers.
EU ministers are in Luxembourg to consider the European Union’s response to Trump’s sweeping tariff regime amid continuing market turmoil and heightened fears of a global economic recession.
It comes after Trump doubled down on his tariff policy in comments aboard Air Force One overnight. He said Europe “has treated us very, very badly,” and “has taken our leaders for a ride”, and declined to hold talks on changing tariffs “unless they pay us a lot of money on a yearly basis”. He also repeated criticism of Europe for not spending a fair share on Nato.
The German economic minister, Robert Habeck, called US tariffs calculations “nonsense”, while French minister delegate for trade Laurent Saint-Martin criticised the “very aggressive and arbitrary” trade measures. Both stressed the need for European partners to remain united.
The EU trade commissioner Maroš Šefčovič said EU leaders will “focus our discussion on the next steps, how to prepare our next move in relation vis a vis the US,” and how to prepare Europe for any potential “trade diversion” including support for companies. But he describes the situation “as a paradigm shift [for] the global trading system”.
My colleague Jakub Krupa is covering all the latest from the meeting – and developments from Europe more widely – over on our Europe live blog:
The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, is in Washington for a second meeting since Donald Trump took office in January, where they’re expected to discuss tariffs, Iran, Israel’s war in Gaza, efforts to return the Israeli hostages, relations with Turkey, and the international criminal court, which has issued an arrest warrant for the Israeli leader for alleged war crimes in Gaza.
The meeting, which NPR notes comes on the 18-month mark since Israel’s assault on Gaza began (follow our live coverage of the war here), appears to have been arranged quite last-minute. On Thursday Trump said he expected a visit soon from Netanyahu – “maybe even next week” – though Axios reported that the timing caught Israeli officials and even some in the Trump administration by surprise.
As my colleague Bethan McKernan wrote on Sunday, this meeting will make Netanyahu the first foreign leader to travel to Washington in an attempt to negotiate a better deal with Trump after his administration’s decision last week to impose sweeping global tariffs that have shaken stock markets, wiping out $5tn (£3.87tn) in value from S&P 500 index companies by Friday’s close in a record two-day decline.
Israel had attempted to duck the shock 17% tariff on Israeli imports by moving preemptively on Tuesday – a day before the tariffs were announced – to drop all remaining duties on the 1% of American goods still affected by them. But Trump moved ahead with the tariffs, saying the US had a significant trade deficit with its Middle East ally and leading beneficiary of military aid.
The US is Israel’s closest ally and largest single trading partner. The two countries signed a free trade agreement 40 years ago and about 98% of goods from the US are tax-free.
An Israeli finance ministry official said on Thursday that Trump’s latest tariff announcement could affect Israel’s exports of machinery and medical equipment.
I’ll be bringing you all the key lines from the Trump-Netanyahu meeting as we get them. In the meantime, you can read Bethan’s full report here:
Fearing legal repercussions, online harassment and professional consequences, student journalists are retracting their names from published articles amid intensifying repression by the Trump administration targeting students perceived to be associated with the pro-Palestinian movement.
Editors at university newspapers say that anxiety among writers has risen since the arrest of Tufts University graduate student Rumeysa Ozturk, who is currently in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) detention fighting efforts to deport her. While the government has not pointed to evidence supporting its decision to revoke her visa, she wrote an op-ed last year in a student newspaper critical of Israel, spurring fears that simply expressing views in writing is now viewed as sufficient grounds for deportation.
Ozturk is one of nearly a dozen students or scholars who have been seized by immigration officials since 8 March, when Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia graduate student and green card holder, was arrested and placed in deportation proceedings over his role in pro-Palestinian protests.
Student editors report particularly acute anxieties among international students who have contributed to their newspapers, but say that requests to take down stories over fears of retaliation are coming from US citizens, too.
Democrats have begun plotting the next phase of their electoral revival with a seven-figure spend in Virginia ahead of a vote they hope will turn into a referendum on Elon Musk.
The party, which had been despondent since Donald Trump’s victory last year, got off the canvas last week with a convincing win in a Wisconsin supreme court race and two strong congressional performances in Florida.
Now all eyes turn to Virginia as the next battleground. In November voters are set to choose a governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general and house of delegates. The election will be a bellwether not only for Trump’s presidency but tech billionaire Musk’s unofficial “department of government efficiency”, or Doge, which has hit Virginia hard because of its proximity to the federal government.
“It is his work and efforts that are going to be litigated in this election,” said Heather Williams, the president of the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee (DLCC), which focuses on building power at state level. “We see the Doge efforts take on a local spin, meaning they’re not just talking about the machete that he wielded without any care or concern but the very real local impact and how it is affecting individuals.”
As Donald Trump and Elon Musk widen their radical attacks on US judges who have stalled some of Trump’s executive orders and Musk’s slashing of federal agencies, they’re gaining backing from top House Republicans and other politicians, including some to whom the tech billionaire made big campaign donations.
The House speaker, Mike Johnson, and judiciary panel chairman Jim Jordan have echoed some of Trump’s attacks on judges, and a judiciary subcommittee hearing on 1 April explored “judicial overreach” and ways to curb judges who have stymied some Trump orders or Musk’s “department of government efficiency” (Doge) and its draconian cuts to the federal government.
Veteran Republican consultants say the hefty campaign-spending muscle of Musk, the world’s richest person, who spent about $300m helping Trump win last year, is likely to boost many Republican candidates in 2026 races, increasing pressures on members from Trump and Musk to accelerate efforts to rein in dissident judges.
“Republicans on Capitol Hill expect Musk to make a lot of donations to them in 2026,” said longtime Republican consultant Charlie Black. “But it’s likely that such donations will be coordinated with the president’s preferences.”
The verbal assaults on judges by Trump and his allies have been fueled by multiple rulings adverse to some Trump executive orders, including major court decisions in March that sought to halt deporting Venezuelan immigrants and blocking penalizing law firms that Trump deemed political enemies.
Donald Trump said on Monday that the Federal Reserve should cut rates.
“The slow moving Fed should cut rates,” Trump reiterated in a post on his social media platform Truth Social.
But Kevin Hassett, director of the US national economic council, yesterday denied that the tariffs were part of a strategy by Trump to crash financial markets to pressure the US federal reserve to cut interest rates, insisting there were would be no “political coercion” of the central bank.
Goods imported from dozens of countries and territories are now going to be taxed at sharply higher rates, and that is expected to drive up the costs of everything from cars to clothes to computers.
A Ukrainian team will travel to the United States early this week to discuss a minerals deal, a Ukrainian source familiar with the situation told Reuters on Monday.
US president Donald Trump’s administration has proposed a more expansive minerals deal which Ukraine has been reviewing in the recent days.
China has accused the US of unilateralism, protectionism and economic bullying over tariffs.
Foreign affairs spokesperson Lin Jian told reporters: “Putting the US first over international rules is a typical act of unilateralism, protectionism and economic bullying.”
US president Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs last week, prompting China and other governments to retaliate quickly, AP reported.
Trump put an additional 34% tariff on Chinese goods as part of “Liberation Day”, coming on top of two rounds of 10% tariffs already declared in February and March, which the US leader said was due to Beijing’s role in the fentanyl crisis.
In response, China suspended sorghum, poultry and bonemeal imports from some American companies.
The latest retaliatory moves from Beijing include more export controls on rare earth minerals, which are critical for various technologies, and filing a lawsuit at the World Trade Organization.
The EU will need to remain calm and proportionate in its response to US trade tariffs and aim for negotiations, Dutch trade minister Reinette Klever said on Monday.
“We need to get ourselves at the table with the Americans and see how we can lower these tariffs,” Klever said before a meeting of EU trade ministers in Luxembourg.
“We need to remain calm and respond in a way that de-escalates. The stock markets right now show what will happen if we escalate straight away. But we will be prepared to take countermeasures if needed to get the Americans at the table.”
Good morning and welcome to the US politics live blog. I’m Tom Ambrose and I will be bringing you all the latest news over the next couple of hours.
We start with the news that president Donald Trump says foreign governments would have to pay “a lot of money” to lift sweeping tariffs that he characterized as “medicine”, as financial markets indicated another week of steep losses could be in store.
Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One, Trump indicated he was not concerned about market losses that has already wiped out nearly $6tn in value from US stocks, Reuters reported.
“I don’t want anything to go down. But sometimes you have to take medicine to fix something,” he said.
Trump said he had spoken to leaders from Europe and Asia over the weekend, who hope to convince him to lower tariffs as high as 50 percent due to take effect this week.
“They are coming to the table. They want to talk but there’s no talk unless they pay us a lot of money on a yearly basis,” Trump said.
Trump’s tariff announcement last week jolted economies around the world, triggering retaliatory levies from China and sparking fears of a global trade war and recession.
On Sunday morning talkshows, Trump’s top economic advisers sought to portray the tariffs as a savvy repositioning of the US in the global trade order. They also tried to minimize the economic shocks from last week’s tumultuous roll out. Wall Street stock futures opened sharply lower on Sunday, in a sign of further turbulence.
Treasury secretary Scott Bessent said more than 50 nations had started negotiations with the U.S. since last Wednesday’s announcement.
“He’s created maximum leverage for himself,” Bessent said on NBC News’ ‘Meet the Press’. Neither Bessent nor the other officials named the countries or offered details about the talks. But simultaneously negotiating with multiple governments could pose a logistical challenge for the Trump administration and prolong economic uncertainty.
Bessent said there was “no reason” to anticipate a recession, citing stronger-than-anticipated US jobs growth last month, before the tariffs were announced.