Donald Trump's self-imposed deadline for a first round of tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China looms in less than two days as economic observers and world leaders try to plan amid the uncertainty.
Washington Post staff tried to separate what is happening from what is not, and to explain what may happen in the future.
Trump has vowed punishing tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China, which are Texas’ biggest international trading partners.
His efforts to “repel the disastrous invasion of our country” by migrants and drugs from Mexico and Canada may soon include ...
Colombia stopped resisting President Donald Trump’s deportation of its unwanted nationals. But America First bullying may yet ...
By threatening Colombia with the type of sanctions reserved for U.S. adversaries, Trump inflamed global interest in ...
Trump’s tariff threat soon escalated beyond a simple tax dispute. The Trump administration issued a series of harsh retaliatory sanctions and penalties, including visa sanctions ...
President Donald Trump's economic warfare and "respect equals fear" philosophy will be key tenets of his administration's ...
President Donald Trump appears emboldened by his first tariff win against Colombia before this weekend’s showdown with some of the United States’s biggest trade partners. Colombian President Gustavo ...
When President Trump threatened to slap tariffs on Colombia if President Gustavo Petro did not accept criminal migrants deported from the U.S., he did not get the initial response he ...
Donald Trump's pick for Commerce secretary underlined that big and broad tariffs are top of mind both for him and the ...
Discover the impact of President Donald Trump's immigration policies and the changes they have brought about in the United ...