President Trump announces trade deal with Vietnam that will let US goods into the country duty-freeNew Foto - President Trump announces trade deal with Vietnam that will let US goods into the country duty-free

WASHINGTON (AP) — PresidentDonald Trumpannounced a trade deal with Vietnam Wednesday that would allow U.S. goods to enter the country duty-free. Vietnamese exports to the United States, by contrast, would face a 20% levy. On his Truth Social platform, Trump declared the pact "a Great Deal of Cooperation between our two Countries.'' In April, Trump announced a 46% tax on Vietnamese imports — one of his so-called reciprocal tariffs targeting dozens of countries with which the United States runs trade deficits. Trump promptly suspended the reciprocal tariffs for 90 days to allow for negotiations like the one with Vietnam. The pause expires Tuesday, but so far the Trump administration has reached a trade agreement with only one of those countries — the United Kingdom. (Trump has also reached a"framework'' agreement with Chinain a separate trade dispute.) "Vietnam has been very keen to get out from under this,'' said Mary Lovely, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. "This is forcing a smaller country to eat it, basically. We can do that. It's the big countries that everybody's keeping their eyes on.'' She doubts that Trump will be able to impose such a lopsided agreement on big trading partners such as the European Union and Japan. The United States last year ran a $122 billion trade deficit with Vietnam. That was the third-biggest U.S. trade gap — the difference between the goods and services it buys from other countries and those it sells them — behind the ones with China and Mexico. In addition to the 20%tariffs, Trump said the U.S. would impose a 40% tax on "transshipping'' — goods from another country that stop in Vietnam on their way to the United States. Washington complains that Chinese goods have been dodging higher U.S. tariffs by transiting through Vietnam. William Reinsch, a former U.S. trade official now with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the significance of the transshipment crackdown will depend on "how the term is defined and enforced. Some transshipment is outright fraud – simply changing the label; some is a legitimate substantial transformation in Vietnam into a new product; and there is a lot in between. Enforcement is always complicated.'' A Februarystudy in the Harvard Business Reviewfound that there was "much less rerouting than previously believed.'' In May, Vietnamapproveda $1.5 billion project by the Trump Organization and a local partner to build a massive golf resort complex near Hanoi, covering an area roughly the size of 336 football fields. Vietnam was a beneficiary of American efforts to counter China's influence. Companies looking to diversify their supply chains away from China flocked to Vietnam. In 2023, it became the only country to host both President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping on state visits. That year, the U.S. upgraded Vietnam to its highest diplomatic status—comprehensive strategic partner—placing it on par with China and Russia. ____ Aniruddha Ghosal reported from Hanoi, Vietnam.

President Trump announces trade deal with Vietnam that will let US goods into the country duty-free

President Trump announces trade deal with Vietnam that will let US goods into the country duty-free WASHINGTON (AP) — PresidentDonald Trumpa...
Trump ramps up pressure on House Republicans to pass major tax cut and spending billNew Foto - Trump ramps up pressure on House Republicans to pass major tax cut and spending bill

President Donald Trump is ramping up pressure on Republicans to get his tax and spending bill across the finish line. Several House Republicans arrived White House on Wednesday morning for meetings as the president presses his party to pass the sweeping legislation -- a centerpiece of Trump's second term agenda. Vice President JD Vance, who cast the tie-breaking vote to get the bill passed in the Senate, was spotted at the White House as well. An administration official said the White House is hosting multiple meetings on Wednesday with Republicans on the White House complex. The president is expected to engage directly with members throughout the day. MORE: House considers president's megabill amid GOP divisions Some of the lawmakers seen entering were GOP Reps. Jeff Van Drew, Rob Bresnahan, Dusty Johnson, Dan Newhouse, Mike Lawler and Andrew Garbarino. Those lawmakers are part of the Main Street Caucus, a group of lawmakers who bill themselves as "pragmatic" conservatives focused on getting things done. President Trump notably has no public events on his schedule Wednesday. To try to assuage Republican concerns regarding the bill's Medicaid cuts, Dr. Mehmet Oz was also at the White House during President Trump and Vance's meeting with House Republicans, according to a source familiar with the matter. Dr. Oz was seen on the White House campus. Dr. Oz also had a call earlier this week with House Republicans who expressed concerns about funding cuts to hospitals, according to the source familiar with his visit to the White House and another source familiar with the call. During that call, Dr. Oz mentioned that the Republicans should look into the finances of those hospitals, the sources said. The Department of Health and Human Services did not respond to a request for comment. Trump previously told ABC News Chief White House Correspondent Mary Bruce he believed things would be "easier" in the House than the Senate with regards to the megabill, butseveral changes made by the Senatehave angered some Republican hardliners in the House. House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, talking to reporters on Capitol Hill, questioned whether the House would be able to pass the megabill on Wednesday -- but said Trump was helping on that front. Asked by ABC News whether he feels like Republicans are short of the votes needed for passage, Scalise acknowledged the bumpy road both in the past and ahead. "We've still had a lot of members that had questions about the changes that the Senate made. That's to be expected," Scalise said. The majority leader added, "When you talk to members, there's some that still are holding out for something different, but at the end of the day, they know this is probably as good as we're going to get." MORE: These Senate changes to Trump's agenda bill could be sticking points in House Scalise said that Republican leadership is meeting with small groups of members who haven't locked in their support, and the president is also helping on that today as their "best closer." "He's talking to individual members," Scalise said of President Trump. "Even when the bill was in the Senate, you had some individual members that wanted some changes in the Senate calling the president to help his support for those changes, and some of those changes were implemented. So you know, the President, from day one, has been our best closer, and he's going to continue to be through today." Trump also continued an online pressure campaign, posting to his conservative social media site multiple times on Wednesday. "Republicans, don't let the Radical Left Democrats push you around," Trump wrote this morning. "We've got all the cards, and we are going to use them. Last year America was a 'DEAD' Nation, with no hope for the future, and now it's the 'HOTTEST NATION IN THE WORLD!' MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!"

Trump ramps up pressure on House Republicans to pass major tax cut and spending bill

Trump ramps up pressure on House Republicans to pass major tax cut and spending bill President Donald Trump is ramping up pressure on Republ...
Madison Keys, Aryna Sabalenka avoid upsets at WimbledonNew Foto - Madison Keys, Aryna Sabalenka avoid upsets at Wimbledon

Sixth-seeded Madison Keys recorded a 6-4, 6-2 win over Olga Danilovic on Wednesday to advance to the third round at Wimbledon. After outlasting Elena-Gabriela Ruse in a grueling, three-set match in sweltering conditions on Monday, Keys needed just 75 minutes to dismiss her Serbian foe. "I definitely felt a little bit more comfortable today -- it's the cloudy, rainy England that we know and love, so that helped a lot ... felt a little bit more normal out here today," Keys said during her on-court interview. Keys, who won the Australian Open earlier this year, fired three aces, had 19 winners and overcame seven double faults to emerge victorious. "I knew that I wanted to get the momentum as early as I could and try to keep it," Keys said. "I knew that she could play really great tennis, so just wanted to get a lead and then run with it." Keys set up a third-round match with Germany's Laura Siegemund, who posted a 6-2, 6-3 win over No. 29 seed Leylah Fernandez of Canada. Top-seeded Aryna Sabalenka battled through a tough first set to record a 7-6 (4), 6-4 win over Czech Marie Bouzkova. The Belarus native notched five aces and had 41 winners against only 18 unforced errors. Sabalenka was pleased to be advancing in the tournament and avoid the fate of second-seeded Coco Gauff, third-seeded Jessica Pegula and fifth-seeded Qinwen Zheng of China. The latter three players have been eliminated from the tournament. "Honestly, it's very sad to see so many top players losing in the first round, but you're better off focusing on yourself and staying away from the results," Sabalenka said in her on-court interview. She then lightened the mood with a joke. "I hope there are no more upsets in this tournament," the top-seeded player said. Sabalenka, who is bidding for her first Wimbledon title, will face the winner of Wednesday's match between 2023 champion Marketa Vondrousova, a Czech, and local favorite Emma Raducanu. Also Wednesday, Spaniard Cristina Bucsa coasted to a 6-1, 6-3 victory over No. 22 seed Donna Vekic of Croatia. Sonay Kartal of Great Britain also topped Bulgarian Viktoriya Tomova in straight sets. --Field Level Media

Madison Keys, Aryna Sabalenka avoid upsets at Wimbledon

Madison Keys, Aryna Sabalenka avoid upsets at Wimbledon Sixth-seeded Madison Keys recorded a 6-4, 6-2 win over Olga Danilovic on Wednesday t...
Buffalo Bills rookie cornerback Maxwell Hairston sued, accused of sexual assaultNew Foto - Buffalo Bills rookie cornerback Maxwell Hairston sued, accused of sexual assault

Buffalo Billsrookie cornerback Maxwell Hairston was named as a defendant in a civil lawsuit after a woman says she was sexually assaulted by Hairston when he attended the University of Kentucky in 2021. Hairston is being accused of sexual assault and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky and obtained by USA TODAY Sports, alleges on the night of March 24, 2021, Hairston came to the women's dorm room uninvited. She says she first met Hairston earlier in 2021 outside their shared on-campus residence hall at the University of Kentucky. "Plaintiff inquired about the purpose of Defendant's visit, to which Defendant responded that he wanted to hang out with Plaintiff. Plaintiff declined and further expressed that she was tired and going to bed before turning around and walking away from the door," according to the lawsuit. The lawsuit states that Hairston followed the woman into her bedroom and ignored her repeated refusals to engage in sexual contact. Hairston then forcibly removed the woman's pajama shorts and sexually assaulted her, the suit states. "Our client showed remarkable strength in coming forward, and we are proud to stand with her in pursuit of accountability and justice," said Peter Flowers, one of the women's attorneys. "No one – regardless of their status or athletic success – is above the law." Hairston was selected with the 30th overall pick by the Bills in April's draft. When asked about Hairston, Bills general manager Brandon Beane said that the draft pick was properly vetted. "We did a lot of research. I think all teams were aware of the Title IX thing. That was fully investigated by the school. He even volunteered to do a polygraph and had notes. It was one of those where there was zero information saying that this actually happened, to what the accusation was. You can't take someone's account and think that's the truth. But yes, we fully investigated that," Beane said. "Every person you talk to at Kentucky, teammates, staff there, plus what we've done, I would say this is a heck of a young man, every person you ask. That's unfortunate when things like that are attached to someone's name; in this case, it doesn't seem to be anything there." The woman, who is seeking a jury trial and compensatory damages on all counts, reported the incident to law enforcement and transferred out of the University of Kentucky. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Maxwell Hairston lawsuit: Bills rookie sued for sexual assault

Buffalo Bills rookie cornerback Maxwell Hairston sued, accused of sexual assault

Buffalo Bills rookie cornerback Maxwell Hairston sued, accused of sexual assault Buffalo Billsrookie cornerback Maxwell Hairston was named a...
Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' Will Devastate Public SchoolsNew Foto - Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' Will Devastate Public Schools

This week, Republican lawmakers are attempting to pass a budget reconciliation bill that pays for unprecedented handouts to thewealthiestAmericans on the backs of cuts to programs that benefit most people. Hidden in this budget package before the House is a national private school voucher program funded through tax breaks for the wealthy that threatens to dismantle our system of public schools. According to Senator Ted Cruz, school vouchers are "the Civil Rights Issue of the 21st century." The Texas Republican argues that vouchers are key to providing educational opportunities for young people. On the contrary, expanding vouchers and eliminating public education will actively harm young people—especiallyBlack, Latino, and Indigenous students. President Donald Trump's so-called "Big, Beautiful Bill" currently includes a provision hidden in thetax codethat offers anunprecedented100% tax deduction for donations to third party organizations that hand out private school vouchers. The push to create a national private school voucher program is part of along legacy of effortsto return to the separate and unequal educational landscape of thepre-civil rights era. Since the 1960s,white segregationistspushed for private school vouchers to avoid the desegregation mandates ofBrown v. Board of Educationand maintain a discriminatory and unequal system of education. We urge lawmakers to drop the private school voucher program from the spending bill and keep it out of the final budget package. We also call on lawmakers to pass legislation that fully funds public schools, such as theKeep Our Pact Act.If the lawmakers fail to do so, it will set us on a dangerous course back toward a pre-civil rights era reality, defined by deliberate racial segregation and extreme disparities in school funding and resourcing. This private school voucher plan to strip millions of children of their opportunity to access free public education directly mirrorsProject 2025. The issue with such a policy is that private school vouchers subsidize wealthy families who can already pay for private school, while decimating public schools for everyone else by diverting resources away from public education. Opponents of free and accessible education argue that voucher programs give families more choice. In actuality, school vouchers go toward private schools that choose which children to enroll, reject, or kick out. Public schools cannot choose which students to provide an education to. By law, they cannot discriminate against students based on their gender, race, disability, religion, English fluency, or LGBTQ identity. But by design, private schools selectively allow admission to a small number of students. They also routinely deny students enrollment for other reasons like grades, behavioral record, and ability to pay. The latter of which is particularly significant becauseresearchsuggests most families can't afford the gap between the voucher and the rest of tuition. Families who can't access elite private schools, whether because they are discriminated against or can't pay the difference in tuition, are often preyed upon by predatory schools that have popped up in states that passed vouchers in recent years. Horror stories abound ofstrip mall schoolswhere no learning happens,where doors shutter mid-year, and wherestudents don't have teachers. Meanwhile,public schools, which serve 90% of American students and 94% of students of color—are forced to do more with less. Students learn from outdated textbooks and old computers while overworked teachers are tasked with educating children who aren't getting the resources they need. A choice between a private school that can reject or discriminate against your child and an under-resourced public school is hardly a choice at all. The draconian cuts to public education caused by vouchers are even leading toa new wave of school closures, disproportionately impacting schools in Black and Brown neighborhoods, and forcing students to start over in unfamiliar environments, often traveling farther from home and adapting to new teachers and peers. When neighborhood schools close, Black and Brown communities lose community centers, polling places, access to services, and vital civic infrastructure, and in some cases lose their communitiesaltogether. Grassroots organizers in Black and Brown communities across the U.S. arefighting  backto save their public schools from closure. They havepacked board meetings,lead school walk-outs, and evenheld hunger strikes. They are on the frontlines of local fights against voucher programs and to support and keep their public schools. The future of our public schools—schools that serve every child for free—are on the line. Instead of gutting our public schools, lawmakers should invest in them and restore the promise of equal education that the civil rights movement fought for. Contact usatletters@time.com.

Trump's ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ Will Devastate Public Schools

Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' Will Devastate Public Schools This week, Republican lawmakers are attempting to pass a budget recon...

 

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