President Donald Trump said he “would not care” if the manufacturers of foreigners increased prices after his imminent prices took effect and suggested that he did not intend to dismiss officials linked to the cat’s cat scandal.
Addressing NBC News on Saturday, Trump denied having warned the CEOs of foreign car manufacturers not to increase prices after the directs on imported cars come into force next month.
“No, I never said that. I don’t care if they increased prices, because people will start buying American manufacturing cars,” said Trump.
“If you do your car in the United States, you will earn a lot of money. If you don’t, you will probably have to come to the United States, because if you do your car in the United States, there is no price,” he added.
Trump has imposed radical prices since returning to the White House, widely targeting Canada, Mexico and China, as well as the steel and aluminum industries.
But Wednesday, the president turned his attention to the automotive sector, announcing a new 25% rate on all imported vehicles and certain automotive parts which should come into force on April 3.
“This will continue to stimulate growth as you have not seen before,” said Trump in the oval office before signing the decree, which said that cars and cars were imported into the United States “in quantities of such quantities and in circumstances such as threatening to harm the national security of the United States”.
The announcement fueled the warnings of reprisals of certain American trade partners.
“We have to consider the steps to respond appropriately. We have all the possible options on the table,” Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said this week in the country’s parliament.
Elsewhere in the interview, Trump approached the signal SMS scandal which dominated the headlines after the editor -in -chief of the Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg, revealed that he had been wrongly added to a group cat where senior American officials – including the defense secretary Pete Hegseth – discussed plans to carry out military strikes on the rebels of Yemen.
The incident aroused concerns among republican legislators and democrats, some calling for Michael Waltz, the national security advisor who added Goldberg to the group, to be dismissed.
But Trump seems to have fallen on the side of Waltz, saying to NBC: “I do not draw people because of false news and because of hunts with witches.”
Trump added that he always trusted Waltz and Hegseth and said strikes were “extremely successful.”
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