Tag: Trump

  • Poll: Majority of Americans disapprove of handling of economy

    Poll: Majority of Americans disapprove of handling of economy

    As many as 58% disapprove of U.S. President Donald Trump’s handling of the economy, dropping to its lowest level since December of 2017, according to a poll released by the AP-NORC Centre for Public Affairs Research.

    The poll, conducted on March 20-24 among 1,229 adults, found that about seven in 10 describe the state of the economy as “poor,” a level of negativity that has remained unchanged since the final weeks of Joe Biden’s presidency in December 2024, when the question was last asked.

    “Trump’s overall job approval is essentially the same as it was when he took office for the first time in 2017, though lower than Joe Biden’s at the beginning of his term,” the poll said.

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    The survey also examined Trump’s policies on migration, foreign conflicts, and trade.

    Asked about the president’s handling of immigration, 49% said they approve, while 50% disapproved.

    On the “Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” 54% disapprove of Trump’s approach, while 44% approve.

    His handling of “trade negotiations with other countries,” amid international criticism of tariffs, received 60% disapproval compared to 38% approval.

    On the Russia-Ukraine war, 56% said they disapprove of Trump’s stance, while 41% approve.

  • Hamas seeks global resistance against Trump’s plan in Gaza

    Hamas seeks global resistance against Trump’s plan in Gaza

    A top Hamas official has called on “anyone who can bear arms” to rise up against U.S. President Donald Trump’s plan to remove Palestinians from the Gaza Strip, a day after Israeli PM Binyamin Netanyahu said he would let the militant group’s leaders leave the war-ravaged enclave if they lay down their weapons.

    “In the face of this sinister plan – one that combines massacres with starvation – anyone who can bear arms, anywhere in the world, must take action,” Sami Abu Zuhri said in a statement.

    “Do not withhold an explosive, a bullet, a knife, or a stone. Let everyone break their silence.”

    Abu Zuhri’s call comes a day after Netanyahu offered to let Hamas leaders leave Gaza but demanded that the Palestinian militant group disarm in the final stages of the war in Gaza.

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    Hamas has expressed a willingness to relinquish Gaza’s administration, but has warned its weapons are a “red line”.

    Netanyahu said Israel was working towards a plan proposed by Trump to displace Gazans to other countries.

    Netanyahu said that after the war, Israel would ensure overall security in Gaza and “enable the implementation of the Trump plan” – which had initially called for the mass displacement of all 2.4 million people living in the Palestinian territory – calling it a “voluntary migration plan”.

    Days after taking office in January, Trump floated a proposal to move Gaza’s population out of the war-battered territory, suggesting that Egypt or Jordan could take them in.

  • I’m not joking about third term as U.S.president, says Trump

    I’m not joking about third term as U.S.president, says Trump

    President Donald Trump yesterday repeated his suggestion he might seek a third term as United States president, which would defy the two-term limit stipulated in the United States’ Constitution.

    In a yesterday morning phone call with NBC News, Trump said: “I’m not joking,” when asked to clarify a remark on seeking another term. He added: “There are methods which you could do it.”

    The 78-year-old billionaire has a long history of suggesting he might serve more than two terms, but yesterday’s remarks – followed by comments to reporters aboard Air Force One – were the most concrete in terms of referring to plans in place to achieve the goal.

    Trump has launched his second presidency with an unprecedented demonstration of executive power, using the world’s richest man Elon Musk to dismantle swaths of the government, and said his supporters want even more.

    “We have almost four years to go and that’s a long time but despite that, so many people are saying you’ve got to run again. They love the job we’re doing,” Trump said yesterday aboard the presidential jet, apparently referring to his political allies and supporters.

    Trump appeared to wave off a reporter’s question about whether he is planning not to leave office on January 20, 2029, the next Inauguration Day, saying: “I’m not looking at that, but I’ll tell you, I have had more people ask me to have a third term.”

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    Earlier in the day, Trump told NBC he had been presented with plans that would allow him to seek re-election.

    When the network asked Trump of a possible scenario whereby Vice-President JD Vance would run for president and then abdicate the role to Trump, the president said “that’s one” method.

    He added that “there are others,” but refused to share further details.

    Amending the U.S. Constitution to allow a third presidential term would require a two-thirds majority in both the House of Representatives and Senate, which Trump’s Republican Party does not have, or a constitutional convention called by two thirds of the states that would propose changes to the charter.

    Both routes appear to be unlikely, given the current number of states and Congressional seats under Republican control.

    Whether he goes through Congress or the states, he would then require ratification from three-quarters of all state legislatures.

    A constitutional convention has never been successfully called in the United States, where all 27 constitutional amendments have been passed by the congressional method.

     In January, days after Trump took office, Republican Andy Ogles of Tennessee introduced a House joint resolution to amend the constitution to allow presidents up to three terms.

  • Trump ‘pissed off’ at Putin overquestioning of Ukraine’s leadership

    Trump ‘pissed off’ at Putin overquestioning of Ukraine’s leadership

    President Donald Trump has threatened to impose secondary tariffs on oil coming out of Russia, if he felt it hindered progress towards ending the war in Ukraine.

    He is set to speak to Russian President Vladimir Putin in the coming week.

    Trump threatens to put “secondary tariffs on oil, on all oil coming out of Russia,” during an interview with NBC yesterday.

    Trump said he was “very angry” and “pissed off” with Putin after the latter criticised the leadership of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, putting his credibility into question.

    Trump said that Putin’s comments were “not going in the right location”.

    Putin had suggested on Friday that Ukraine be put under temporary UN control until a “competent” government was elected. The suggestion was dismissed by Washington, as Putin once again took aim at the government in Kyiv and Zelenskyy whom the Kremlin continues to accuse of being “illegitimate”.

    Providing more insight into his reasoning, Trump added that “new leadership means you’re not going to have a deal for a long time, right?”

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    Trump also said during the interview that “If Russia and I are unable to make a deal on stopping the bloodshed in Ukraine, and if I think it was Russia’s fault — which it might not be — but if I think it was Russia’s fault, I am going to put secondary tariffs on oil, on all oil coming out of Russia.”

    It was a significant change of tone towards Russia by Trump, who said he would be speaking to Putin during the coming week.

    Russia and Ukraine this month agreed in principle to a limited 30-day ceasefire in the Black Sea, but both sides have since continued to attack each other with drones and missiles.

    During a separate interview on Saturday, Trump threatened to “bomb” Iran and apply “secondary tariffs” to the country if Iran refused to make a nuclear deal with the U.S. to ensure it didn’t develop the weapon.

  • Journalist mistakenly added to Trump’s top secret war chat

    Journalist mistakenly added to Trump’s top secret war chat

    The Editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, made a jaw-dropping revelation yesterday that President Donald Trump’s national security team added him to a top secret chat on the military strikes in Yemen.

    National Security Adviser Mike Waltz started the conversation on Signal, an encrypted messaging app, that included users identified as Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard.

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    A CIA representative, Trump adviser Stephen Miller and White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles were also listed in the group.

    Commenting on the issue, Politico wrote: “Members of Congress and national security staffers were stunned Monday by a bombshell report that top Trump administration officials — including the vice president and Defence secretary — discussed war plans in a Signal group chat.”

    Rep. Pat Ryan (D-NY) said: “Only one word for this: FUBAR. If House Republicans won’t hold a hearing on how this happened immediately, I’ll do it my damn self.”

    Goldberg, a longtime Washington D.C. journalist, found himself added to the conversation.

    “It should go without saying—but I’ll say it anyway—that I have never been invited to a White House principals-committee meeting, and that, in my many years of reporting on national-security matters, I had never heard of one being convened over a commercial messaging app,” he wrote in The Atlantic.

    The shocking story shows operational details were unwittingly revealed. Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, a former Fox News host, is now under the microscope over the egregious failing.

    Goldberg noted that “Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defence, had texted me the war plan at 11:44 a.m”. The bombs started dropping in Yemen around 2 p.m.

  • Trump unveils new app for illegal immigrants to ‘self-deport’

    Trump unveils new app for illegal immigrants to ‘self-deport’

    President Donald Trump is urging undocumented immigrants to “self-deport” using a newly released mobile application designed to facilitate and streamline voluntary departures from the United States.

    “People in our country illegally can self deport the easy way, or they can get deported the hard way and that’s not pleasant,” Trump stated in a 90-second video posted on social platform X.

    The mobile application, named CBP Home, is designed to offer undocumented migrants an accessible way to voluntarily leave the United States. 

    Trump highlighted that utilising the app could enhance their chances of legally returning in the future, whereas a forced deportation would result in a permanent ban on re-entry.

    “The CBP Home app is now available free across all mobile app stores, and I encourage those who have violated our laws to use this option,” he said.

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    “Today, do it right, and come back into our country. Do it wrong, and you’ll never be back again.”

    Trump described the CBP Homeapp as “the safest option for illegal aliens and our law enforcement,” emphasising its potential to save taxpayers money by reducing the resources required for deportations. 

    At the same time, his administration has intensified deportation efforts, invoking the 1798 Alien Enemies Actto expel Venezuelan nationals suspected of links to the Tren de Araguagang. 

    Over the weekend, U.S. District Judge James Boasberg ordered flights carrying these individuals to a Salvadoran prison to turn around. 

    However, the administration proceeded with two flights, disputing the judge’s authority on the matter.

  • EU, Canada retaliate against Trump’s tariffs as trade war escalates

    EU, Canada retaliate against Trump’s tariffs as trade war escalates

    The European Union (EU) and Canada yesterday hit back at President Donald Trump’s steel and aluminum tariffs with their own levies, announcing tariffs on billions of dollars’ worth of products, including bourbon and motorcycles, while warning of further retaliation.

    The 27-nation bloc said its two-stage response would target roughly $28 billion in U.S. exports, while Canada announced 25 percent retaliatory tariffs on roughly $20.7 billion ($29.8 billion Canadian dollars) worth of American goods.

    The announcement of the European measures came at the same time Trump’s tariffs took effect yesterday. Canada’s announcement to start retaliatory tariffs came several hours later yesterday morning.

    The U.S. decision raising tariffs on steel and aluminum to 25 percent for global imports is the latest salvo in Trump’s ongoing campaign to reshape America’s trading relationship with the rest of the world. European leaders have for months planned to swiftly retaliate, even as they have emphasised that a trade war would hurt both sides and tried to negotiate an off-ramp with the Trump administration.

    With a deal still elusive, the EU executive branch, the European Commission, said that starting April 1, the bloc will reimpose tariffs dating to Trump’s first term. It will then place extra measures on more than $19 billion in products by mid-April after consulting with E.U. member states.

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     “We deeply regret this measure,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement Wednesday, as she and other European officials indicated that they were still ready to negotiate. “Jobs are at stake, prices up, nobody needs that.”

    Canadian Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc said the government is following a “dollar for dollar” approach in response to Trump’s increased tariffs on steel and aluminum that could cost Canada significant U.S. sales.

    The Canadian tariffs, set to start at 12:01 a.m. Thursday, will hit steel products worth roughly $8.7 billion ($12.6 billion CAD), aluminum products worth $2.08 billion ($3 billion CAD) and $9.85 billion ($14.2 billion CAD) of additional imported U.S. goods.

    LeBlanc said the U.S. tariffs were “inserting disruption and disorder” for consumers in both countries and unfairly targeting Canada’s steel and aluminum industry.

  • Talks with Trump govt won’t remove sanctions on Iran, says Khamenei

    Talks with Trump govt won’t remove sanctions on Iran, says Khamenei

    • • U.S. sends letter to Tehran through UAE

    Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said yesterday that negotiations with the U.S. will not lead to the removal of sanctions, but will instead tighten them.

    His remarks came during an annual meeting with university students in Tehran.

    He noted that some within Iran continue to raise the issue of negotiations with the US, asking why Iran does Tehran not engage in talks. He said his response is that negotiations would not yield positive results for the country.

     “I want to say that if the goal of negotiation is to lift sanctions, negotiating with this US government will not lift sanctions, meaning it won’t remove the sanctions,” he stated. “It will tighten the knot of the sanctions, it will increase the pressure. Negotiating with this government will increase the pressure.”

    It came on the same day that Anwar Gargash, a senior Emirati diplomat and advisor to the president of the United Arab Emirates, arrived in Tehran to meet Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi.

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    Gargash brought with him a letter from U.S. President Donald Trump for Ayatollah Khamenei, according to the Iranian Foreign Ministry,

    While the content of the letter remains speculative, sources suggest that Trump is seeking to resume negotiations with Iran in hopes of resurrecting the 2015 nuclear deal in exchange for curbs on Iran’s nuclear programme.

    Trump unilaterally withdrew from the landmark accord in May 2018, after which Iran gradually increased its uranium enrichment from 3.57%, as stipulated in the deal, to 60% purity.

    Iran engaged in indirect negotiations with the Joe Biden administration, mediated by the EU, but the marathon talks failed to produce any breakthrough as tensions continued to simmer.

    In his remarks Wednesday, Khamenei said sanctions are not ineffective, but they are not the sole cause of Iran’s economic problems.

    He addressed American threats to Iran’s nuclear programme, saying that the U.S. claims it will not allow Iran to acquire nuclear weapons. He asserted, however, that if Iran had wanted to develop nuclear weapons, the US would not have been able to stop it.

  • Trump says he will buy a Tesla after stock slump

    Trump says he will buy a Tesla after stock slump

    US President Donald Trump has said he will “buy a brand new Tesla” after shares in the electric car firm fell more than 15%.

    Trump blamed “radical left lunatics” boycotting the firm to “attack and do harm” to Tesla owner Elon Musk.

    However, stock analysts said the main reason for the poor performance of the shares was due to fears about Tesla meeting production targets and a drop in sales over the past year.

    Trump’s own economic policies on tariffs are also making investors nervous, analysts said.

    US and Asian markets slumped on Monday as investors concerned about the economic effects of Trump tariffs sold shares.

    This came after the US president hinted at a potential US recession, telling a TV interviewer that the world’s biggest economy was in a “period of transition”.

    As part of the sell-off, shares in technology firms dropped, with Tesla stock sinking by 15.4%, while artificial intelligence (AI) chip giant Nvidia, Facebook owner Meta, Amazon, and Google-parent Alphabet also fell sharply.

    On Tuesday, Trump took to his Truth Social platform trying to drum up Tesla sales, asking “Republicans, Conservatives, and all great Americans” to support Musk, who has been putting his energies into trying to slash federal government jobs.

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    Despite his comments, Trump policies so far have been designed to limit electric car sales, including his revoking a 2021 order by former president Joe Biden that half of all car sales should be electric by 2030, and halting unspent government funds for charging stations.

    Trump said that Musk is doing a “fantastic job”, but “radical left lunatics” are “trying to illegally and collusively boycott Tesla” in an effort “to attack and do harm to Elon”.

    “I’m going to buy a brand new Tesla tomorrow morning as a show of confidence and support for Elon Musk, a truly great American,” Trump added.

    Following the his comments, Tesla shares rose about 5% in premarket trading.

    BBC

  • Tariffs row makes World Cup ‘more exciting’ – Trump

    Tariffs row makes World Cup ‘more exciting’ – Trump

    US President Donald Trump says the political and economic tensions between the United States and its 2026 World Cup co-hosts Canada and Mexico will be good for the tournament.

    Trump has imposed tariffs – taxes charged on goods imported from other countries – on the United States’ two neighbours.

    Asked how he saw the World Cup playing out, given the current trade situation between the three nations, Trump said: “I think it’s going to make it more exciting.

    “Tension’s a good thing, I think it makes it much more exciting.”

    At the start of the week, Trump confirmed that he was moving forward with 25% tariffs on goods imported from Mexico and Canada.

    In the days that followed, the Trump administration announced that it would be temporarily sparing carmakers from the import levies.

    The next day, the president signed an executive order that placed a number of other exemptions on various goods.

    Trump was speaking alongside Fifa president Gianni Infantino at the signing of an executive order to establish a taskforce that will oversee preparations for the tournament.

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    Trump will chair the task force, which will “co-ordinate with federal agencies in planning, organising and executing” the tournament.

    Forty-eight teams will compete in the expanded World Cup in 2026.

    Eleven of the 16 host cities are in the United States, with Toronto and Vancouver in Canada also set to stage matches, as will Guadalajara, Mexico City and Monterrey in Mexico.

    Azteca Stadium in Mexico City will host the opening match on 11 June with the final being played at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on 19 July.

    The United States will also host the 2025 Club World Cup in June and July.

    BBC