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Home » Trump announces tariffs of up to 30% on six more countries – live updates | Trump administration
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Trump announces tariffs of up to 30% on six more countries – live updates | Trump administration

claudioBy claudiojulio 9, 2025No hay comentarios11 Mins Read
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Trump issues tariff letters to six more countries

But before he meets with west African leaders, Donald Trump is now announcing more trade notices to several countries on Truth Social.

The US president is posting copies of separate letters addressed to Brunei, the Philippines, Iraq, Algeria, Moldova and Libya. Each country’s letter has its own tariff rate:

30% on Algeria

25% on Brunei

30% on Iraq

30% on Libya

25% on Moldova

20% on the Philippines

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Updated at 12.03 EDT

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‘I want a deal, but not at any price,’ says Netanyahu following Trump meetings

In brief remarks to the press earlier, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that following his second meeting with Donald Trump in two days, “President Trump and I have a common goal: we want to achieve the release of our hostages, we want to end Hamas rule in Gaza, and we want to make sure that Gaza does not pose a threat to Israel any more”.

On the ceasefire negotiations, the Israeli leader, who was at the US Capitol for meetings with lawmakers, went on:

President Trump wants a deal, but not at any price. I want a deal, but not at any price.

Israel has security requirements and other requirements, and we’re working together to try to achieve them.

Donald Trump earlier told reporters there is a “very good chance” of a ceasefire in Gaza this week or next. He said

There’s a very good chance of a settlement this week on Gaza. We have a chance this week or next week.

Trump made it clear several times that his priority was achieving “peace” and getting the hostages back, but – like Netanyahu – he made no mention of other urgent matters like the desperate need to safely get aid to starving Palestinian people in the strip.

Asked by a reporter whether pushing out Palestinians to third countries they have no connection to will make Israel safer in the long run, Netanyahu said:

We’re not pushing out anyone, and I don’t think that’s President Trump’s suggestion. His suggestion was giving them a choice.

He claimed Palestinians should have “freedom of choice” to leave Gaza, “no coercion, no forcible dislocation”. “If people want to leave Gaza they should be able to do so,” he said of the besieged territory, much of which his military has flattened to rubble.

Israel stands accused of committing genocide and ethnic cleansing in Gaza, and has made clear its intention to seize parts of the territory and remain there indefinitely.

Benjamin Netanyahu at the Capitol on Wednesday. Photograph: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

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Supreme court declines to let Florida enforce immigration crackdown

The US supreme court has maintained a judicial block on a Republican-crafted Florida law that makes it a crime for immigrants in the US illegally to enter the state.

The justices denied a request by state officials to lift an order by Florida-based US district judge Kathleen Williams that barred them from carrying out arrests and prosecutions under the law while a legal challenge plays out in lower courts. Williams ruled that Florida’s law conflicted with the federal government’s authority over immigration policy.

Florida’s attorney general James Uthmeier and other state officials filed the emergency request on 17 June asking the supreme court to halt the judge’s order. Williams found that the Florida law was likely unconstitutional for encroaching on the federal government’s exclusive authority over US immigration policy.

The state’s request to the justices was backed by America First Legal, a conservative group co-founded by Stephen Miller, a senior aide to Donald Trump and a key architect of the administration’s hardline immigration policies.

Florida’s immigration measure was passed by the state’s Republican-controlled legislature and signed into law in February by governor Ron DeSantis. It made Florida one of at least seven states to pass such laws in recent years, according to court filings.

The American Civil Liberties Union in April sued in federal court to challenge the law. Bacardi Jackson, executive director of the ACLU of Florida, in a statement issued after the challenge was filed said that Florida’s law “is not just unconstitutional – it’s cruel and dangerous”.

Williams issued a preliminary injunction in April that barred Florida officials from enforcing the measure.

The Atlanta-based 11th US circuit court of appeals in June upheld the judge’s ruling, prompting the Florida officials to make an emergency request to the supreme court.

On the same day that Florida’s attorney general filed the state’s supreme court request, Williams found him in civil contempt of court for failing to follow her order to direct all state law enforcement officers not to enforce the immigration measure while it remained blocked by the judge.

Williams ordered Uthmeier to provide an update to the court every two weeks on any enforcement of the law.

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Senate votes to confirm Trump’s pick to head Federal Aviation Administration

The Senate has voted 53 to 43 approve Republic Airways CEO Bryan Bedford to head the Federal Aviation Administration.

Bedford, the head of the regional air carrier nominated by Donald Trump and approved for a five-year-term, will oversee $12.5bn in funding over five years to remake the aging US air traffic control system passed by Congress last week.

Bedford has also pledged to maintain tough oversight of Boeing, which came under harsh criticism from the National Transportation Safety Board last month for a mid-air emergency involving a new Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 missing four key bolts.

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Fema should be ‘eliminated as it exists today,’ Kristi Noem says

The Federal Emergency Management Agency should be eliminated in its current form and reformed so it responds more effectively to disasters, homeland security secretary Kristi Noem said at a meeting on reforming Fema on Wednesday.

Speaking at a review council discussing reforms of Fema, Noem said the “entire agency needs to be eliminated as it exists today, and remade into a responsive agency”.

Noem’s comments were a restatement of her thinking on Fema’s future but notable given that Fema personnel have been deployed to Texas to help in search and rescue efforts following flash floods on 4 July that have killed at least 119 people, with scores more still unaccounted for.

Noem, who chairs the Fema Review Council, noted that the agency had provided resources and supported the search and recovery efforts in Texas, but criticized the agency for what she called past failures to respond to disasters effectively.

“It has been slow to respond at the federal level,” Noem said. “That is why this entire agency needs to be eliminated as it exists today, and remade into a responsive agency.”

Defenders of the agency have said the Trump administration is seeking to politicize a vital agency that helps states both prepare for natural disasters like hurricanes and floods and clean up in the aftermath.

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Updated at 15.39 EDT

Trump says five west African nations unlikely to face US tariffs

Further to my earlier post on this, Donald Trump said that five west African nations are going to lower their tariffs and that the United States treats the continent better than China does.

At a meeting with the leaders of Gabon, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mauritania and Senegal at the White House, Trump added that he did not think those countries at the gathering were likely to see any US tariffs.

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Donald Trump also said that his administration will reach a deal with Harvard University.

“Harvard’s been very bad – totally antisemitic. And, yeah, they’ll absolutely reach a deal,” he told reporters at the White House.

Earlier we reported that his administration had escalated its feud with Harvard, declaring the Ivy League school may no longer meet the standards for accreditation and that it would subpoena it for records about its international students.

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Updated at 14.24 EDT

Trump says Gaza ceasefire possible this week or next

Donald Trump said there is a “very good chance” of a ceasefire in Gaza this week or next, after meeting Israel’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday for the second time in two days to discuss the situation.

“There’s a very good chance of a settlement this week on Gaza,” Trump told reporters. “We have a chance this week or next week.”

He made it clear several times that his priority was achieving “peace” and getting the hostages back, but made no mention of other matters like the desperate need to safely get aid to starving Palestinian people in the strip.

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Donald Trump said he would release more letters to countries notifying them of higher US tariff rates today and tomorrow, including Brazil.

“Brazil, as an example, has not been good to us, not good at all,” Trump told reporters at the event with west African leaders at the White House. “We’re going to be releasing a Brazil number, I think, later on this afternoon or tomorrow morning.”

Trump said the tariff rates announced this week were based on “very, very substantial facts” and past history.

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Updated at 14.54 EDT

Trump says he would like to visit Africa at ‘some point’

Donald Trump earlier told a table of west African leaders that he would like to travel to Africa “at some point”.

Trump has never visited the continent in an official capacity, and his signaling that he’s open to doing so is no doubt tied to his view of the many commercial opportunities for the US in African countries.

Trump’s guests today include the leaders of Gabon, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mauritania and Senegal, and has so far concentrated on his “trade, not aid” policy.

With all of these countries facing 10% tariffs on goods exported to the US, they seem keen to try to negotiate this rate down. Indeed several leaders have sought to flatter Trump as a “peace-maker” and said they want him to get a Nobel Peace Prize, while also touting their countries’ wealth in assets such as critical minerals and rare earths and their strategic importance in terms of migration and maritime security.

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Updated at 13.38 EDT

South Sudan says eight deportees from the US are under government care

War-torn South Sudan has said it is holding a group of eight men controversially deported from the United States.

Only one of them is from South Sudan. The rest comprise two people from Myanmar, two from Cuba, and one each from Vietnam, Laos and Mexico.

The Trump administration is trying to move unwanted migrants to third countries as some nations refuse to accept returnees. Administration officials said the men had been convicted of violent crimes in the US. The decision has been fought in US courts.

“They are currently in Juba under the care of the relevant authorities, who are screening them and ensuring their safety and wellbeing,” the South Sudanese foreign ministry said in a statement late on Tuesday.

It did not give details, but said the “careful and well-studied decision” was part of “ongoing bilateral engagement”.

“South Sudan responded positively to a request from the US authorities as a gesture of goodwill, humanitarian cooperation and commitment to mutual interests,” it added.

Juba, South Sudan’s capital city, last year. Photograph: SOPA Images Limited/Alamy

The deportations have raised safety and other concerns among some in South Sudan.

“South Sudan is not a dumping ground for criminals,” said Edmund Yakani, a prominent civic leader.

United Nations experts, appointed by the UN Human Rights Council but who do not speak on behalf of the UN, have criticised the move.

“International law is clear that no one shall be sent anywhere where there are substantial grounds for believing that the person would be in danger of being subjected to … torture, enforced disappearance or arbitrary deprivation of life,” 11 independent UN rights experts said in a statement.

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Updated at 13.26 EDT

As Donald Trump approaches six months in office as president, his administration’s agenda has shaken every corner of US life.

According to research from Harris Poll, Americans are reconsidering major life events including marriage, having children and buying a home amid economic anxiety under the Trump administration.

Six in 10 Americans said the economy had affected at least one of their major life goals, citing either lack of affordability or anxiety around the current economy.

We want to hear from you. Have you been delaying major life decisions amid economic and political anxieties? When did things begin to feel destabilized? What effect in particular has delaying life decisions had on your household?

Find the link to take part here:

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Lisa O'Carroll

Lisa O’Carroll

EU trade commissioner Maroš Šefčovič has not had his scheduled call with US trade representative Jamieson Greer yet, so those on standby for a possible announcement by Donald Trump today on a deal with the bloc may have some time to wait.

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Updated at 12.46 EDT



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