It was another day of chaos on Thursday when the markets sank again after a short -term rally. The optimism caused by Donald Trump’s retirement to the “reciprocal” world rates quickly evaporated in the midst of investor fears concerning continuous uncertainty. Towards the end of a wild week – the United States imposing 145% prices on China and Beijing which seem to be back – the markets are tired.
Actions did not even respond to news Thursday morning that the European Union announced that it suspends 25% of reprisals against American imports and that new data has shown that inflation in the United States has been cooled 2.4% in March – both would generally be optimistic at Wall Street.
Former secretary in the United States of the Treasury, Janet Yellen, described Trump’s economic policies “the worst self-inflicted injury” that an administration has ever imposed on an “economy that works well”.
Trump inflicts more market pain
American actions dropped again Thursday after a historic rally after the shock retirement from Donald Trump on Wednesday on the heavy prices he had just imposed on dozens of countries.
The falls came while the president blamed the “transitional problems” for the reaction of the market and that the sale deepened after a clarification of the White House noted that the total prices on China had been increased by 145% since Trump had taken office.
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The Supreme Court orders us to wrongly return the expelled man
The Supreme Court told Trump administration that it should return to a Salvadoral man wrongly expelled from the United States. There follows an order from an American district judge that the administration “facilitates and performs” the return of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, in response to a trial brought by the man and his family contesting the legality of his expulsion.
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Trump degenerates repression on the US high university, according to reports
The Trump administration plans to place Columbia University as part of a consent decree, according to a Wall Street Journal report, a dramatic escalation of the federal government’s repression against the Ivy League institution.
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The United States can expel activist for its convictions, says the government
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio argued that the militant of the University of Columbia, Mahmoud Khalil, could be expelled for his alone convictions.
Faced with a deadline to submit evidence for its attempt to withdraw Khalil, the federal government has rather submitted a brief memo, signed by Rubio, citing the authority of the Trump administration to expel non-citizens whose presence in the country damages the interests of American foreign policy. The memo does not allege criminal conduct and maintains rather that Khalil can be expelled for his beliefs.
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Rules of justice non-citizens must register with the United States government
A federal judge authorizes the Trump administration to move forward with a requirement that non-citizens in the United States must register with the federal government, in a decision that could have large-scale repercussions for immigrants across the country.
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House adopts the bill on the prouvance of citizenship to vote
The American chamber approved on Thursday a bill that would force people to prove that they are citizens when they register to vote, which, according to opponents, could deprive millions of Americans.
The bill, sponsored by the Texas Republican, Chip Roy, calls people who register to vote or update their registration to show proof of documentary citizenship, which could be a passport or a birth certificate. Although the bill indicates that real IDS, which have improved security standards, could be used if they indicate whether the applicant is an American citizen, these IDS do not generally include this information and legal residents who are not citizens and not eligible to vote can always obtain real IDs.
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The speaker muscles through Trump’s budgetary framework
The House Republican speaker Mike Johnson has muscled through a budgetary framework of several dollars who opens the way to the “big and beautiful bill” of Donald Trump, one day after a rebellion of the right threatened to sink it.
The resolution was adopted during a 216-214 vote, with only two Republicans – the tax conservatives Thomas Massie from Kentucky and Victoria SPARTZ of Indiana – joining all the Democrats in opposition.
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What happened to others today:
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More than 600 international students and recent graduates in the United States have revoked their visas Or their legal status amended by the State Department, according to aggregated data from the whole country.
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Nearly $ 4 million in federal funding have been withdrawn from the prestigious climate research department of an Ivy League University Because the Trump administration determined that it exposed students and other young people to “climate anxiety”.
Catch up? Here is what happened on April 9.