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  • Trump announces 25% tariffs on foreign-made cars – CBS News

    Trump announces 25% tariffs on foreign-made cars – CBS News

    moneywatch

    / CBS News

    Trump announces 25% tariffs on all imported cars

    Trump announces 25% tariffs on all foreign-made cars 02:14

    President Trump on Wednesday said he will put a 25% tariff on vehicles and auto parts imported into the U.S., escalating his administration’s use of aggressive trade measures in an effort to boost domestic manufacturers.  

    “This will continue to spur growth like you haven’t seen before,” Mr. Trump said from the Oval Office Wednesday afternoon. “We’ll effectively be charging a 25% tariff. But if you build your car in the United States, there is no tariff.”

    Mr. Trump said the new auto tariffs will take effect on April 2 and that the U.S. would start collecting the duties the following day. The president added he believes the new import duty could raise between $600 billion and $1 trillion in revenue for the U.S. over the next two years.

    “This number will be used to reduce debt greatly,” Mr. Trump said. “Basically I view it as reducing taxes and reducing debt.”

    White House staff secretary Will Scharf, who stood next to Mr. Trump during the announcement, offered a more conservative estimate of how much the new auto tariffs would raise, predicting roughly $100 billion in new revenue. 

    Mr. Trump also reiterated his goal of making interest paid on auto loans tax deductible, while noting that such a deduction would apply only to cars made in the U.S. 

    Tax deductions are generally only employed by high-income Americans because most taxpayers take the standard deduction, which means tax-deductible auto loans wouldn’t impact low- or middle-income households.

    Meanwhile, car prices are “likely to rise significantly” for consumers, according to Rella Suskin, equity analyst at Morningstar in a Thursday research note. Suskin added, “Domestically produced vehicles are expected to gain market share, but very few, even from US-based manufacturers, are made with 100% U.S. content.”

    New Trump tariffs and the possible effect on economy 06:00

    Automaker shares take a hit

    The latest salvo of tariffs comes after Mr. Trump earlier this month gave a one-month exemption to U.S. automakers from the round of import duties that took effect on March 4. 

    Because tariffs are taxes on imports that are largely passed onto U.S. consumers, they can cause households to cut back on spending and dampen economic growth, according to experts. 

    Shares of the Big Three U.S. automakers — Ford, General Motors and Stellantis — all sank after Mr. Trump announced the new tariffs. In Thursday morning trading, Ford’s shares slipped 38 cents, or 3.7% to $9.92, while GM tumbled 7.3%. Stellantis shed 2.6%.

    Tesla shares, which have slumped this year because of disappointing sales and consumer unhappiness over CEO Elon Musk’s involvement with the Trump administration, rose $7.13, or 2.6%, to $279.19. Tesla manufactures its vehicles within the U.S., although Musk said on social media that the electric vehicle maker will still feel an impact. Some Tesla parts are imported from other countries.

    “Important to note that Tesla is NOT unscathed here. The tariff impact on Tesla is still significant,” Musk wrote on X. 

    In a statement Wednesday night, Matt Blunt, president of the American Automotive Policy Council, a U.S. trade group that represents the Big Three, said that “U.S. Automakers are committed to President Trump’s vision of increasing automotive production and jobs in the U.S. and will continue to work with the Administration on durable policies that help Americans.”

    Blunt added, “In particular, it is critical that tariffs are implemented in a way that avoids raising prices for consumers and that preserves the competitiveness of the integrated North American automotive sector that has been a key success of the President’s USMCA agreement.” 

    When reached for comment, Stellantis directed CBS News to the AAPC’s statement. 

    Mr. Trump has long said that tariffs on auto imports would be a defining policy of his presidency, betting that the costs created by the taxes would lead both American and foreign automakers to relocate production to U.S. soil. 

    Automakers with U.S. plants still depend on Canada, Mexico and other nations for parts and finished vehicles. Because booting up manufacturing facilities would take time, in the medium term domestic auto prices would likely increase and car sales decline, experts say.

    Car prices could jump

    One analysis of Mr. Trump’s tariffs estimated that auto prices could rise as much as $12,200 for some models due to the new import duties, according to a report from Anderson Economic Group, a Michigan-based economic consultancy. 

    “In the long-run, this could boost domestic investment and production. In the short-run, however, it will be inflationary and, assuming that domestic producers respond by substantially increasing their own prices, could make new vehicles something of a luxury item,” Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist with Capital Economics, said in a report. 

    Targeting imported cars also could strain ties with key trading U.S. partners including Canada, Japan, Mexico and South Korea, as well as Europe.

    “I deeply regret the U.S. decision to impose tariffs on EU automotive exports,” Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, said in a social media post. “Tariffs are taxes — bad for businesses, worse for consumers in the U.S. and the EU. The EU will continue to seek negotiated solutions, while safeguarding its economic interests.”

    Why consumers don’t feel confident about the economy right now 02:31

    About 50% of cars sold in the U.S. are manufactured within the country. Among imports, about half come from Mexico and Canada, with Japan, South Korea and Germany, also major suppliers.

    Other groups expressed support for the new auto tariffs.

    “Auto production is the bedrock of a nation’s manufacturing ecosystem,” Scott Paul, president of the Alliance for American Manufacturing, an industry trade group, said in a statement posted social media. “We’ve seen it eroded in the U.S. over the past four decades first by Asian imports then by NAFTA. A 25% tariff on auto imports isn’t the only way to spur more auto plants here, but it is in my view necessary.”

    Shawn Fain, president of United Auto Workers, said the tariffs could bolster job growth in the U.S. “With these tariffs, thousands of good-paying blue-collar auto jobs could be brought back to working-class communities across the United States within a matter of months, simply by adding additional shifts or lines in a number of underutilized auto plants,” he said.   

    Kathryn Watson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Aimee Picchi

    Aimee Picchi is the associate managing editor for CBS MoneyWatch, where she covers business and personal finance. She previously worked at Bloomberg News and has written for national news outlets including USA Today and Consumer Reports.

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  • Trump unlikely to fire Waltz or others involved in Signal chat leak, officials say – The Guardian US

    Trump unlikely to fire Waltz or others involved in Signal chat leak, officials say – The Guardian US

    Donald Trump is unlikely to fire his national security adviser, Mike Waltz, or anyone else involved in the now infamous Signal group chat because doing so would be a tacit admission of fault and seen as handing victory to the Atlantic, according to two officials close to the president.

    Trump repeated his public support for Waltz at the Oval Office on Wednesday, saying his national security adviser had taken responsibility for creating the group chat and for unintentionally adding the editor-in-chief of the Atlantic magazine, Jeffrey Goldberg.

    The officials said Trump rarely if ever admits mistakes, and has reportedly enjoyed the ferocious response of Waltz and other White House officials, including the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, to critical reporting of the leak.

    The president also defended Hegseth’s involvement. “He had nothing to do with this. Hegseth? How do you bring Hegseth into this?”

    Hegseth sent the messages that sparked the classification concerns. The contradiction appears to underscore Trump’s personal determination to not hand the Atlantic a “scalp”, a person familiar with the matter said, and indicates he will continue to characterize the leak of attack plans as minor and immaterial.

    Nevertheless, the Trump administration’s attempts to defend the leak of sensitive military plans on grounds that they were not classified became harder to reconcile on Wednesday, after the Atlantic published the full text chain showing the level of detail of the attack plans.

    The White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, repeated that none of the messages were classified, while Hegseth and other officials made the semantic argument that the messages did not amount to a “war plan”, as they were originally characterized by the Atlantic, which later began using the term “attack plans”.

    A screenshot of a text sent by a user named Pete Hegseth about timings for strike launches
    Screenshot shared by the Atlantic of Pete Hegseth’s chats regarding strikes on Yemen in a Signal group.

    Former US officials said that technically speaking, a “war plan” would be more specific about the types and routings of weaponry, the coordinates of targets, contingency and backup options, and including a more thorough strategy discussion.

    However, the information shared by Hegseth included a summary of operational details about the operation to strike Houthi rebel targets in Yemen, such as the launch times of F-18 fighter jets, the time that the first bombs were expected to drop, and the time that naval Tomahawk missiles would be launched.

    The former US officials universally agreed that these military details were sensitive from a national security perspective because the information was shared before the attack began. Had it leaked, the targets could have escaped or otherwise compromised the mission.

    The US Department of Defense’s own classification guidelines suggest the kind of detailed military plans in the Signal chat would typically be classified at least at the “secret” level, while some of the real-time updates could have risen to a higher level of classification.

    The group chat also included a message from Waltz who shared a real-time update (“first target – their top missile guy – we had positive ID of him walking into his girlfriend’s building and it’s now collapsed”), which would have also ordinarily been classified at least at the “secret” level if it came from an asset operated by the intelligence community.

  • Private data of Trump officials in Signal scandal accessible online: report – The Guardian US

    Private data of Trump officials in Signal scandal accessible online: report – The Guardian US

    The private data of top security advisers to US President Donald Trump can be accessed online, German news magazine Der Spiegel reported on Wednesday, adding to the fallout from the officials’ use of a Signal group chat to plan airstrikes on Yemen.

    Mobile phone numbers, email addresses and in some cases passwords used by national security adviser Mike Waltz, defense secretary Pete Hegseth, and director of national intelligence Tulsi Gabbard can be found via commercial data-search services and hacked data dumped online, it reported. It is not clear in all cases how recent the details are.

    The Trump administration has been facing calls for the resignation of senior officials amid bipartisan criticism after Monday’s embarrassing revelations. The chat group, which included vice-president JD Vance, Hegseth, the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, and others, discussed sensitive plans to carry out strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen via the Signal app, potentially threatening the safety of US servicemen and women taking part in the operation.

    On Wednesday evening, Trump backed Hegseth, saying “He had nothing to do with this” and calling the scandal a “witch-hunt”.

    The phone numbers and email addresses – mostly current – were in some cases used for Instagram and LinkedIn profiles, cloud-storage service Dropbox, and apps that track a user’s location.

    Der Spiegel reported it was “particularly easy” to discover Hegseth’s mobile number and email address, using a commercial provider of contact information. It found that the email address, and in some cases even the password associated with it, could be found in more than 20 data leaks. It reported that it was possible to verify that the email address was used just a few days ago.

    It said the mobile number led to a WhatsApp account that Hegseth appeared to have only recently deleted.

    The Gabbard and Waltz numbers were reportedly linked to accounts on messaging services WhatsApp and Signal. Der Spiegel said that left them exposed to having spyware installed on their devices.

    It said it was even possible foreign agents were spying during the recent Signal group chat on top-secret US plans for airstrikes on Yemen’s Houthi rebels on 15 March.

    Waltz inadvertently included a journalist in the chat, the Atlantic magazine’s Jeffrey Goldberg. The magazine published further details of the conversation on Wednesday.

    Der Spiegel said the three officials had not responded to its requests for comment.

    The national security council said the Waltz accounts and passwords referenced by the German magazine had all been changed in 2019.

    With Agence France-Presse

  • Trump news at a glance: more Signal messages released as Republicans break ranks with White House – The Guardian US

    Trump news at a glance: more Signal messages released as Republicans break ranks with White House – The Guardian US

    The Atlantic magazine has published fresh messages from a group chat among top US officials in which they discuss specific operational details of plans to bomb Yemen, after Donald Trump and other administration officials insisted the information was not classified.

    It reproduced numerous messages from the text chat between the Pentagon chief, Pete Hegseth – who said on Tuesday that “nobody was texting war plans” – and top intelligence officials.

    Democrats have accused the government of lying and used an intelligence committee hearing on Wednesday to demand an explanation of how operational military plans are not classified information.


    More Signal messages from Trump officials released

    Newly released messages from the Signal group chat discussing an attack on Yemen revealed details of US bombings, drone launches and other information about the assault, including descriptions of weather conditions and specific weapons.

    “There is a clear public interest in disclosing the sort of information that Trump advisers included in nonsecure communications channels, especially because senior administration figures are attempting to downplay the significance of the messages that were shared,” the Atlantic wrote.

    Read the full story


    Republican senators call for investigation of Signal scandal

    In rare signs of unrest, top Republican senators called for an investigation into the Signal leak scandal and demanding answers from the Trump administration, as they raise concerns it will become a “significant political problem” if not addressed properly.

    Read the full story


    Intel chiefs deny discussing war plans on Signal

    US intelligence chiefs on Wednesday denied breaking the law or revealing classified information in a group chat where they discussed details of airstrikes on Yemen in the presence of a journalist, despite allegations from Democrats that the leak was reckless and possibly illegal.

    Read the full story


    Private data of Hegseth, Gabbard and Waltz available online, Spiegel reports

    The private data of top security advisers to US President Donald Trump can be accessed online, German news magazine Der Spiegel reported, adding to the fallout from the Signal group chat scandal.

    Mobile phone numbers, email addresses and in some cases passwords used by national security adviser Mike Waltz, defense secretary Pete Hegseth, and director of national intelligence Tulsi Gabbard can be found via commercial data-search services and hacked data dumped online, it reported.

    Read the full story


    Trump announces new 25% tariffs on cars from overseas

    Donald Trump announced plans to impose sweeping 25% tariffs on cars from overseas on Wednesday, days before the president is expected to announce wide-ranging levies on other goods from around the world. Canadian prime minister Mark Carney called the move a “direct attack” on Canadian workers.

    Read the full story


    Tufts graduate student detained over pro-Palestinian activism

    Rumeysa Ozturk, a doctoral student in Boston detained on Tuesday by federal immigration agents in response to her pro-Palestinian activism, was on Wednesday evening being detained at the South Louisiana Ice processing center, according to the government’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) detainee locator page.

    Read the full story


    US supreme court upholds Biden regulation on ‘ghost guns’

    The US supreme court upheld a federal regulation targeting largely untraceable “ghost guns” imposed by Joe Biden’s administration in a crackdown on firearms whose use has proliferated in crimes nationwide.

    Read the full story


    NPR and PBS testify in heated hearing before Doge panel

    The heads of National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service testified in a heated congressional subcommittee hearing, helmed by conservative Marjorie Taylor Greene, amid a renewed Republican effort to defund US public media.

    Read the full story


    Mike Johnson floats eliminating federal courts

    Republican House speaker Mike Johnson suggested potentially defunding, restructuring or eliminating US federal courts as a means of pushing back against judicial decisions that have challenged Donald Trump’s policies.

    Read the full story


    What else happened today:

    • A Democrat won a Pennsylvania state senate seat in a district that overwhelmingly voted for Trump, offering a ray of hope for the party.

    • Trump nominated a conservative, pro-Israel media activist as US ambassador to South Africa, at a time when the relationship between the two countries is at a nadir.

    • A US appeals court upheld a lower court’s temporary block on the Trump administration’s deportation of some Venezuelan immigrants under a little-used 18th-century law.

    • Edward Coristine, the best-known member of Elon Musk’s so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge) service team of technologists, once provided support to a cybercrime gang that bragged about trafficking in stolen data and cyberstalking an FBI agent, according to digital records reviewed by Reuters.

    • The Department of Health and Human Services canceled around $12bn in federal grants to states that were allocated during the Covid-19 pandemic, the federal department and state officials said on Wednesday.


    Catching up? Here’s what happened Tuesday, 25 March.