Trump says US ‘does not want something’ from Canada forward of assembly with Carney
Donald Trump has posted on his Fact Social platform to say that he’s wanting ahead to assembly with Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney.
Trump says he “very a lot need[s] to work with him, however can not perceive one easy TRUTH — Why is America subsidizing Canada by $200 Billion {Dollars} a 12 months, along with giving them FREE Navy Safety, and plenty of different issues?”
We don’t want their Automobiles, we don’t want their Vitality, we don’t want their Lumber, we don’t want ANYTHING they’ve, apart from their friendship, which hopefully we are going to all the time keep. They, however, want EVERYTHING from us!
He says Carney might be arriving shortly on the White Home and that this can “be, most probably, my solely query of consequence.”
Key occasions
Carney arrives at White Home
Donald Trump has greeted Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney, on the White Home.
The pair shook fingers and smiled for the cameras earlier than heading inside. They didn’t reply questions from reporters on a US-Canada commerce deal.
Right here’s a have a look at who might be becoming a member of the Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, and Donald Trump of their White Home assembly immediately, in keeping with CBC.
The Canadian delegation will embrace:
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Worldwide commerce minister Dominic LeBlanc
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Overseas affairs minister Mélanie Joly
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Public security minister David McGuinty
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Canada’s ambassador to the US Kirsten Hillman.
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Clerk of the privy council John Hannaford
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Carney’s interim chief of workers Marco Mendicino
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Senior adviser Lisa Jorgensen
And on the US aspect:
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Vice-president JD Vance
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Secretary of state Marco Rubio
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Secretary of commerce Howard Lutnick
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US commerce consultant Jamieson Greer
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Trump’s chief of workers Susie Wiles
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Deputy chief of workers Stephen Miller
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US ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra
Trump says US ‘does not want something’ from Canada forward of assembly with Carney
Donald Trump has posted on his Fact Social platform to say that he’s wanting ahead to assembly with Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney.
Trump says he “very a lot need[s] to work with him, however can not perceive one easy TRUTH — Why is America subsidizing Canada by $200 Billion {Dollars} a 12 months, along with giving them FREE Navy Safety, and plenty of different issues?”
We don’t want their Automobiles, we don’t want their Vitality, we don’t want their Lumber, we don’t want ANYTHING they’ve, apart from their friendship, which hopefully we are going to all the time keep. They, however, want EVERYTHING from us!
He says Carney might be arriving shortly on the White Home and that this can “be, most probably, my solely query of consequence.”
In a heated change at an oversight listening to of the Home appropriations subcommittee on homeland safety, Kristi Noem was pressured to acknowledge that the US authorities doesn’t have the best to deport US residents.
Noem was grilled by Democratic consultant from Illinois Lauren Underwood on Donald Trump’s feedback about not realizing whether or not he has to uphold the structure and requested if she herself was dedicated to the structure, per the oath she swore on taking up her function as homeland safety secretary. “Completely”, Noem replied.
“In fact the president is inside his authority to drive coverage choices inside the bounds of federal regulation and the structure, however that’s not what you’ve been doing,” stated Underwood.
What I’m asking is whether or not you consider that you’ve the authority to disregard appropriations regulation. Do you consider that the structure offers the chief department unilateral authority to withhold funds appropriated by the legislative department?
Underwood stopped Noem a number of instances for not answering the query and stated the president is “anticipated to comply with the regulation” in searching for rescissions if he disagrees with sure spending, stating that it’s Congress, not the president, that controls the ability of the purse.
Underwood then pressed Noem a number of instances for a “sure or no” reply on whether or not she believes the structure ensures everybody within the US the best to due course of.
“Do you consider that the US authorities has the authority to deport Americans?” she requested. Noem replied: “No, and we’re not deporting US residents.” Underwood stated she was glad to listen to that Noem didn’t consider that they had that authority, including:
I do know everybody viewing this listening to is aware of that a number of US residents have been deported so far.
Sam Levine
Two attorneys who lately left the justice division introduced on Tuesday they’re beginning their very own agency to signify civil servants affected by Donald Trump’s efforts to dismantle the federal authorities.
The attorneys, Clayton Bailey and Jessica Merry Samuels, stated their agency would “problem in federal courtroom the administration’s illegal ways, including to the efforts of nonprofits and different organizations stepping as much as meet the second”.
“The Trump administration’s govt orders focusing on regulation companies have created a tradition of worry and made it harder for folks in want of counsel–together with federal workers–to seek out justice,” Bailey stated in a press release. “We have now been impressed by the rising variety of attorneys creating new companies and organizations to guard particular person rights and the rule of regulation, and we now have launched the Civil Service Regulation Heart to assist contribute to these efforts.”
The choice to create the agency comes as lots of the nation’s largest and most prestigious regulation companies have made offers with Trump to keep away from being punished with govt orders. 4 companies – Perkins Coie, Jenner & Block, WilmerHale, and Susman Godfrey – have all sued the administration for govt orders focusing on the companies and received at the least preliminary orders blocking them. (Perkins Coie earned a everlasting order on Friday.)
Abbe Lowell, a outstanding Washington lawyer who has defended Hunter Biden and represented Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, left his agency final week to start out a follow centered on representing focused federal workers. The agency is presently representing Mark Zaid, a outstanding lawyer who incessantly represents whistleblowers, in a go well with filed Monday to try to power Trump to revive his safety clearance.
US might strike commerce offers with some nations ‘as early as this week’, treasury secretary Scott Bessent says

Chris Stein
Treasury secretary Scott Bessent instructed lawmakers that some nations might strike new commerce offers with the United States as quickly as this week.
“I’d assume that, maybe as early as this week, we might be saying commerce offers with a few of our largest buying and selling companions. They’ve come to us with superb presents,” the secretary instructed a Home appropriations subcommittee on Tuesday morning.
The Trump administration is trying to negotiate offers with dozens of nations forward of a 9 July deadline, after which reciprocal tariffs the president unveiled final month, then paused for 90 days, will return into impact. Many economists fear the levies, which are supposed to be equal to no matter boundaries the buying and selling companions impose on US imports, will ship costs spiking in america and disrupt commerce globally.
In his testimony to Congress, Bessent defended the president’s strategy to tariffing main buying and selling companions, saying: “In negotiating with a few of them, they could not just like the tariff wall that president Trump has put up, however they’ve them. So if tariffs are so unhealthy, why do they like them?”
Federal decide orders Trump administration to facilitate return of second man improperly deported to El Salvador
A decide has ordered the Trump administration to facilitate the return to the US of a second man it improperly deported, in a case with parallels to that of Kilmar Ábrego García, Politico experiences.
Politico has recognized the person as Daniel Lozano-Camargo, a 20-year-old Venezuelan who was dwelling in Houston and working a automotive detailing enterprise till 15 March, when the Trump administration declared him an “alien enemy” and swiftly deported him to an El Salvador jail together with tons of of different males, together with Ábrego García.
Not like Ábrego García, Lozano-Camargo was “expelled beneath the Trump administration’s legally questionable invocation of the Alien Enemies Act”. Right here’s extra from Politico:
Like lots of the Venezuelans expelled beneath the 18th century wartime regulation, he contends he got here to the US to flee persecution in his residence nation. And in addition like lots of the different deportees, his relations consider he was accused of being a Venezuelan gang member primarily due to his tattoos.
Crucially, Lozano-Camargo was coated by a 2024 authorized settlement that barred immigration authorities from deporting him whereas his request for asylum was pending. US district decide Stephanie Gallagher, the Trump-appointed decide who authorized that settlement, dominated final month that Lozano-Camargo’s deportation violated the settlement.
Gallagher ordered the administration to “facilitate” Lozano-Camargo’s return however, as with Ábrego García, the administration is resisting. In a courtroom submitting launched on Monday, the justice division known as Lozano-Camargo a member of “a violent terrorist gang” and stated that disqualifies him from asylum within the US. […]
Gallagher’s ruling marked the second time that courts have declared that the Trump administration violated pre-existing courtroom orders by deporting folks to a infamous El Salvador jail in March. […] US district decide Paula Xinis dominated that the administration had disobeyed a 2019 immigration courtroom order barring the federal government from deporting Ábrego García to El Salvador as a result of he confronted a threat of violence there. The supreme courtroom upheld Xinis’ order directing the Trump administration to facilitate his return and made clear that his deportation was unlawful.
Gallagher is about to carry a listening to on the difficulty immediately in her Baltimore courtroom.
As Home Republicans maintain frenetic closed-door conferences this week making an attempt to kind by excellent points to get their mega price range invoice – which goals to chop taxes, beef up border safety and lift protection funding, amongst different issues – over the road, Politico highlights that there’s loads of nervousness in key battleground districts over one such key sticking problem – potential cuts to Medicaid, in keeping with new knowledge from GOP polling agency Assembly Avenue Insights.
Sixty-eight per cent of voters stated slicing Medicaid advantages to pay for tax cuts is a nasty concept – together with 44% of Republicans. And waiting for subsequent 12 months’s midterms, 52% of voters stated they’d be much less prone to vote for a member of Congress who helps Medicaid cuts. The ballot was carried out throughout 10 battleground districts in Arizona, Colorado, Iowa, Maine, Michigan, New York and Pennsylvania.
Home speaker Mike Johnson admitted yesterday that his bold timeline for the invoice might slip amid intra-party preventing. Politico reported that if Home Republicans can’t move the megabill by Memorial Day, as he’s focusing on, they’ll “shortly thereafter”, Johnson stated.
As we’ll be bringing you all the important thing traces from Donald Trump and Mark Carney’s assembly later this morning, listed below are the important thing timings: the US president and Canadian PM are because of meet at 11.30am ET on the White Home earlier than holding an 11.45 assembly within the Oval Workplace, the place they may even take questions from reporters. From 12.15pm the 2 leaders could have lunch within the Roosevelt Room.
White Home removes NTSB vice chair – report
The White Home on Monday eliminated the vice chair of the Nationwide Transportation Security Board, the newest in a sequence of dismissals by Donald Trump from unbiased US authorities businesses, sources instructed Reuters.
Alvin Brown, a Democrat who was the first-ever African American elected mayor of Jacksonville, Florida, was designated as vice chair final December by then president Joe Biden after he joined the five-member board in March 2024. Brown didn’t instantly return a Reuters electronic mail searching for remark. A White Home official confirmed the departure.
US commerce deficit surges to report excessive in March
The US commerce deficit widened to a report excessive in March as companies boosted imports of products forward of tariffs, which dragged gross home product into damaging terrain within the first quarter for the primary time in three years, Reuters experiences.
The commerce hole jumped 14% to a report $140.5bn from a revised $123.2bn in February, the Commerce Division’s Bureau of Financial Evaluation (BEA) stated on Tuesday.
Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs, together with elevating duties on Chinese language imports to a staggering 145%, fuelled a rush by companies to herald merchandise to keep away from increased prices. Whereas reciprocal tariffs with most commerce companions had been suspended for 90 days, duties on Chinese language items got here into impact in early April, triggering a commerce battle with Beijing.
Imports vaulted 4.4% to an all-time excessive $419bn in March. Items imports soared 5.4% to a report $346.8bn. Exports climbed 0.2% to $278.5bn, additionally a report excessive. Exports of products elevated 0.7% to $183.2bn.
The federal government reported final week that the commerce deficit minimize a report 4.83 share factors from GDP final quarter, ensuing within the financial system contracting at a 0.3% annualized charge, the primary decline for the reason that first quarter of 2022.
Economists anticipate the flood of imports to ebb by Could, which might assist GDP to rebound within the second quarter. They, nevertheless, warning that the raise from subsiding imports could possibly be offset by a drop in exports as different nations boycott American items and journey. There was a lower in guests to the US, particularly from Canada, in protest over the punitive tariffs in addition to an immigration crackdown that has seen travellers detained and deported.
Axios has a thought-provoking piece on what critics on each the left and proper have dubbed “Maga Maosim” to characterize the rising nationalist motion beneath the second Trump administration. “His second time period model,” Axios writes, “displays concepts the US has lengthy fought in opposition to – now reframed in nationalist phrases.” Axios writes:
President Trump’s grand financial imaginative and prescient depends on a easy tradeoff: that Individuals will settle for short-term private sacrifice – increased costs, fewer choices, slimmer earnings – in service of long-term nationwide power.
Trump is breaking sharply from free-market orthodoxy in his second time period, mixing bursts of anti-capitalism with a top-down, nationalist agenda for American dominance.
Critics on the left and proper warn of an rising “MAGA Maoism” – a motion that calls for ideological purity, glorifies financial sacrifice, and embraces state energy as a method to reshape society.
Trump’s strongman instincts – and his deep skepticism of cultural elites and bureaucrats – have solely intensified the provocative comparisons to China’s revolutionary chief.
[There are some obvious key differences, as noted in the piece. Trump’s worldview isn’t driven by Marxist theory but by a deep-seated belief that America has been ripped off for decades. He’s also constrained by the rule of law, unlike Mao Zedong’s violent communist regime. Plus, much of Trump’s agenda remains pro-capitalist: He champions private industry and his appeals to sacrifice are rooted in geopolitical competition, not class struggle.]
However, Axios writes, take heed to current rhetoric from Trump and his prime advisers, and it’s clear why the analogy has gained traction. From Trump likening the US to a division retailer in reference to his “setting the worth” together with his tariff coverage, to his now notorious suggestion that children could have fewer dolls to play with owing to potential provide chain shortages, to his assertion that he’ll personally name CEOs whose enterprise choices he disagrees with.
“The Maga motion,” Axios notes, “sees industrial labor because the spine of American id, and is pursuing a imaginative and prescient steeped in nostalgia and nationalism.” Trump’s officers have talked about what is basically the thought of industrial “jobs for all times”, avoiding the “religious degradation of the working class”, and even the thought that fired federal staff might assist provide manufacturing labor (drawing comparability’s to Mao’s “re-education” coverage).
“The massive image,” Axios notes, “is that Trump’s embrace of centralized financial energy is only one piece of a broader governing model that borrows closely from strongman traditions.”
Ritualistic reward: Trump’s televised cupboard conferences all the time start together with his secretaries showering him in reward – casting the president as the one chief able to restoring US greatness.
Loyalty checks: Trump and his aides have carried out mass purges of profession officers deemed insufficiently loyal, throughout the federal authorities.
Civil society: Trump has sought retribution in opposition to the media, regulation companies, NGOs, and political opponents. Some Chinese language see echoes of the Cultural Revolution, when practically all of society’s establishments had been destroyed.
Conflict on academia: The Trump administration has cracked down on dozens of universities over alleged antisemitism and DEI applications, transferring to weaken elite liberal establishments seen as hostile to Maga.
And eventually – navy spectacle: The Pentagon plans to host an enormous navy parade on Trump’s birthday in June.
Subsequent spherical of Iran-US nuclear talks prone to be in Oman this weekend – report
A fourth spherical of nuclear talks between Iran and the United States is prone to happen over the weekend within the capital of Oman, with Iranian state media pointing to 11 Could as a possible date.
Cautioning that the timing was not but finalised, an Iranian supply near the negotiating workforce instructed Reuters: “The talks will happen over two days in Muscat, both on Saturday and Sunday or Sunday and Monday.”
Initially scheduled for 3 Could in Rome, the fourth spherical of negotiations was postponed with mediator Oman citing “logistical causes”.
High US negotiator Steve Witkoff additionally stated Washington was making an attempt to carry the following spherical of talks this weekend, in keeping with Axios, a day after Iran’s overseas ministry reiterated Tehran’s dedication to diplomacy with Washington.
EU plans tariffs on €100bn of US items if talks fail, Bloomberg Information experiences
The European Union plans to hit about €100bn ($113.26bn) value of US items with further tariffs if commerce talks fail to ship a passable outcome for the bloc, Bloomberg Information reported on Tuesday.
The proposed retaliatory measures might be shared with member states as early as Wednesday and consultations will final for a month earlier than the checklist is finalized, the report stated, citing folks acquainted with the matter.
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