The White House released a fact sheet Nov. 13 confirming details of the recent U.S.-South Korea tariff deal.
The White House issued a fact sheet Nov. 14 confirming a trade deal with Switzerland that sets a "cumulative reciprocal tariff rate of no higher than 15%" for Switzerland, giving it the "same treatment given to the European Union."
Over the weekend, President Donald Trump promised to give dividends of $2,000 to Americans from the revenues collected from his tariff policy.
After a visit from five Central Asian presidents, President Donald Trump posted on social media that Uzbekistan will do a combination of purchases of U.S. exports and investments in the U.S. worth almost $35 billion over the next three years. He said these purchases and investments would be in critical minerals, aviation, auto parts, energy and chemicals, infrastructure, agriculture and information technology.
President Donald Trump continues to argue that the Supreme Court will rule that his emergency tariffs are constitutional, and that the promises of investments from South Korea, Japan and the EU would evaporate without the 15% tariffs he imposed on their exports.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, in two TV interviews, praised the president's trade diplomacy in Asia, and said "a price has got to be paid" for Ontario's ad quoting former President Ronald Reagan in support of free trade.
President Donald Trump said he "got sort of everything that we wanted" out of the meeting last week with Chinese President Xi Jinping, adding later that, "Because of tariffs, President Xi allowed us to win every single point."
President Donald Trump declined to put a new date on when immigration/fentanyl tariffs of 25% on Mexico would go up to 30%. Back on July 31, he said they would keep tariffs at the same rate through Oct. 29, as the two sides spoke about Mexico ending its non-tariff trade barriers.
President Donald Trump told reporters Oct. 27 that he had a good meeting with Brazil's president while he was in Malaysia. "We'll see what happens. I don't know if anything's gonna happen, but we'll see. They'd like to do a deal. We'll see. Right now they're paying, I guess, a 50% tariff. But we had a great meeting."
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said there's no hang-up preventing the South Korean trade framework from moving to a signed deal, "just a lot of details to work out. It's a very complicated deal, and I think we're very close." However, he told reporters on Air Force One on Oct. 27 that he didn't think it would be done by Oct. 29, when the president lands in Korea.