Howard Lutnick, Commerce Secretary and Trump
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Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick shed light on President Donald Trump's 90-day tariff pause and addressed critics of the policy on 'Special Report.'
From Fox News
his administration abruptly said it would suspend these higher rates for 90 days, and instead maintain a recently-imposed 10% levy on nearly all global imports.
From The Boston Globe
"We think we're in very good shape. We think we're doing very well. Again there will be a transition cost, transition problems, but in the end it's going to be a beautiful thing," Trump said.
From ABC
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6hon MSN
President Donald Trump is happy to talk about the financial markets when they’re rising, as they were on Wednesday, but when markets were falling Thursday in the aftermath of his remarkable turnabout on tariffs,
Hosted on MSN13d
Trump's commerce secretary Howard Lutnick said he sold a thousand 'gold card' visas in a dayOn March 20, 2025, U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick told hosts on the "All-In" business and technology podcast that "yesterday, I sold 1,000" of President Donald Trump's proposed "gold card" visas — $5 million visas the government plans to sell ...
2don MSN
Tesla’s stock has plunged by 42 percent since the beginning of 2025, proving analysts wrong. Trump’s Commerce Secretary went on record to praise Musk and urge people to buy Tesla stock. The message didn’t get through,
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said President Trump "wasn't kidding," and his reciprocal tariffs will take effect later this week.
Amidst Wall Street's historic selloff, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is now leading trade negotiations, a role shift amplified by Jamie Dimon's endorsement. Following a pause on tariff implementation,
The hedge fund manager, one of Trump’s most notable business allies during his campaign, doubled down on his call for the president to institute a 90-day pause on the tariffs.
2don MSN
Senate Democrats sent a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to call on the Trump administration to reverse its recent sweeping tariff actions, while raising alarm over the potential
President Donald Trump’s new tariffs threaten to push up prices on clothes, mobile phones, furniture and many other products in the coming months, possibly ending the era of cheap goods that Americans enjoyed for about a quarter-century before the pandemic.