Supreme Court to hear Trump's tariff case at record speed
Digest more
Donald Trump’s 30-day police takeover may be over, but federal attempts to tighten control over Washington, D.C., are far from done.
It didn’t make headlines, but Aug. 15 should be remembered as Legal Liberation Day for unionized federal workers. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit restored to these 1.3 million workers a right that’s been denied to them since 1978: to sue their labor union for unlawful discrimination.
Experts say that consumers will shoulder the cost of these Liberation Day tariffs, but President Trump argues that they're necessary to balance trade and bring manufacturing back home. We want them to come home. They have to come home. We're going to treat ...
The working paper, published on August 28, hypothesises that foreign investors sought to acquire dollars immediately after ‘Liberation Day’ in anticipation of the tariffs being imposed on April 9. Peter Zimmerman, a research economist at the Cleveland Fed and one of the paper’s co-authors, tells Central Banking that when dollars are unavailable
Developers in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties have landed more than $3.2B in construction financing since April 2, according to a Bisnow analysis, the day President Donald Trump announced sweeping global tariffs, sparking fears of soaring costs and stalled projects.
From the sidelines of the 51st edition of the Ambrosetti conference, Valerio De Molli, CEO of the European House, Ambrosetti, discusses Trump’s tariffs and Europe’s unanimous reaction to them.
Join Communion & Liberation for a day of faith, music, witness, and fellowship at St. Katharine of Siena Parish on September 6.
The negative impact of the "Liberation Day" tariffs widely predicted last April – inflation and recession, financial havoc and ruin – have so far failed to materialize.