Saturday, October 4, 2025

BREAKING: Fed FINALLY Cuts Rates.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: The Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) moved to cut interest rates on Wednesday by 25 basis points (bps), marking the first rate cut of 2025.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: The Federal Reserve, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, President Donald J. Trump, and the U.S. economy.

📍WHEN & WHERE: September 17, 2025, in Washington, D.C.

🎯IMPACT: While economists largely forecasted the rate cut, the decision still triggered a degree of market volatility, though this is fairly common in the wake of a reduction in rates.

IN FULL

The Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) moved to cut interest rates on Wednesday by 25 basis points (bps), marking the first rate cut of 2025. While economists largely forecasted the rate cut, the decision still triggered a degree of market volatility, with stocks initially jumping higher on the news.

In August, during the Federal Reserve’s annual Jackson Hole summit, the central bank’s chairman, Jerome Powell, signalled that the FOMC would likely move to cut rates at its September meeting. At Jackson Hole, Powell indicated data showing a weakening labor market likely necessitated a reduction in interest rates. “[W]ith policy in restrictive territory, the baseline outlook and the shifting balance of risks may warrant adjusting our policy stance,” Powell said.

Notably, the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ (BLS) benchmark revision, released earlier this month, revised downward the total number of jobs created between April 2024 and March 2025 by a shocking 911,000. This revision, accounting mostly for the final year of the former Biden government, means the monthly job growth number for much of 2024 stood at only 71,000 per month, instead of the initially reported average of 147,000 per month.

Additionally, the August jobs report suggests the U.S. economy could be slowing, with only 22,000 jobs added for the month—placing further pressure on the Federal Reserve to finally begin lowering borrowing costs. President Donald J. Trump has repeatedly pushed for Powell to cut rates, warning that the central bank’s hesitation risked putting the U.S. economy into a recession.

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Europe Must Stop Buying Russian Oil Before More U.S. Sanctions: Trump.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: President Donald J. Trump urged NATO allies in Europe to halt their purchases of Russian oil, suggesting he would only move to implement tougher sanctions against Russia if they do so.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: President Trump, NATO allies, and European nations such as Hungary, France, Belgium, and Spain.

📍WHEN & WHERE: Comments made by Trump on Sunday evening.

💬KEY QUOTE: “Europe… they’re my friends, but they’re buying oil from Russia, so we can’t be expected to be the only ones that are, you know, full bore.” – Donald Trump

🎯IMPACT: Trump’s remarks highlight ongoing frustrations with NATO allies over their continued reliance on Russian oil amid the Ukraine-Russia conflict.

IN FULL

President Donald J. Trump is urging NATO allies in Europe to stop purchasing Russian oil as he considers new sanctions against Russia. Speaking to reporters on Sunday evening, Trump criticized European nations for continuing to import Russian oil while the United States takes a stronger stance.

“Europe… they’re my friends, but they’re buying oil from Russia, so we can’t be expected to be the only ones that are, you know, full bore,” Trump said. “Europe is buying oil from Russia. I don’t want them to buy oil,” he said, stressing that European sanctions on Russia “are not tough enough.” The President previously emphasized in a Saturday post on Truth Social that he will impose “major Sanctions on Russia” once the other NATO allies lay out their own sanction plans and end Russian oil purchases.

According to the Center for Research on Energy and Clean Air, Europe imported 21.9 billion euros’ worth of Russian oil in 2024. While the European Union (EU) has reduced its dependency on Russian energy since the invasion of Ukraine, it has not completely ceased imports. Countries such as Hungary, France, Belgium, and Spain remain significant importers, with Hungary, due to its geography and existing pipeline infrastructure, being unable to decouple from Russia easily.

Trump also noted his willingness to impose new sanctions, stating, “I’m willing to do sanctions, but they’re going to have to toughen up their sanctions commensurate with what I’m doing.” In a letter to NATO, Trump emphasized that major sanctions would only be implemented when all NATO nations agree to stop buying Russian oil.

Additionally, Trump called for NATO to impose “50 percent to 100 percent” secondary tariffs on China, which he suggested could be reversed once the conflict between Russia and Ukraine concludes. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is backing the tariff push, telling reporters last week, “I think the idea to put tariffs on countries who continue to make deals with Russia is a right idea.”

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Trump Tariffs, Global Trade Rebalancing Are Wrecking China’s Economy.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: The Chinese economy is showing significant signs of weakening as U.S President Donald J. Trump’s reciprocal tariff policies begin to take their full effect, and Chinese President Xi Jinping’s attempt to recollectivize parts of his country’s economy has failed.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: China, the United States, U.S. President Trump, Xi Jinping, and Chinese investors and consumers.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The data covers most of the last year.

🎯IMPACT: The slowdown provides further evidence that U.S. tariffs are having a direct impact on the Chinese economy, though China’s deflationary signals suggest more global economic turbulence may be underway as well.

IN FULL

U.S. President Donald J. Trump’s reciprocal tariff policies, aimed at rebalancing global trade, appear to be inflicting significant turbulence on the Chinese economy, exposing long-suspected weaknesses—especially Beijing’s ability to stimulate domestic consumption. While China reported its GDP came in just above its five percent target, at 5.3 percent, in the first half of this year, economists forecast a significant drop in growth for the remainder of the year as Trump’s tariff policies continue to take effect and the front-loading of Chinese imports slows in response.

Chinese government data shows the increase in retail sales for August falling well below expectations at just 3.4 percent year-to-year, with four percent being forecasted. Additionally, August retail showed a significant downward slide from July’s 3.7 percent. Also of concern for China is lagging industrial production, with the rise in August coming in at 5.2 percent, down from July’s 5.7 percent, and missing the 5.8 percent forecast. Notably, earlier this year—in the face of President Trump’s tariffs on Chinese goods—a number of Chinese factories were forced to temporarily shut down and have struggled to bring their production back online.

The slowdown in the Chinese economy is notable as Beijing has thus far been unsuccessful in its campaign to encourage domestic consumption to counter-balance falling exports. Since officially joining the World Trade Organization (WTO) on December 11, 2001, China has rapidly expanded its export economy, effectively becoming the global factory and displacing manufacturing economies in most other nations, including the U.S.

However, China’s reliance on goods production never translated to a meaningful domestic increase in consumption. This is in part a symptom of the very mechanism the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) used to monopolize global manufacturing, namely the purposeful—albeit controlled—deflation of their currency. China’s use of deflation to manipulate its currency—and maintain in practice around a seven-to-one exchange ratio between the yuan and U.S. dollar—is becoming especially worrying as both the Chinese economy and global economy are beginning to show signs of natural deflation as well.

The lack of domestic consumption is compounded by China’s lack of a genuine asset economy. Due to state ownership and intervention, the Chinese stock market lacks the dynamism of its Western counterparts, leading Chinese investors to instead plow their money into real estate. However, the heavily debt-financed Chinese real estate market has become a worrying economic bubble that even Beijing recognizes poses a long-term problem. The Chinese government data suggests the real estate market could be collapsing, with property investment down nearly 13 percent between January and August, an acceleration from the 12 percent decline in the last half of 2024.

Taken as a whole, along with the Chinese unemployment rate inching up from 5.2 percent in July to 5.3 percent in August, the data imply that the CCP’s attempts to blunt the most direct impacts of President Trump‘s tariffs have failed. In addition, it appears that Chinese President Xi Jinping‘s efforts to recentralize—and arguably recollectivize—portions of the country’s economy may only exacerbate its economic woes.

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Here’s What the Latest CPI Numbers Tell Us About Inflation and the Economy.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: The Consumer Price Index (CPI) crept up in August. Headline CPI rose 2.9 percent year-over-year, while core CPI increased 3.1 percent. However, goods prices remained muted, with the increase being driven primarily by shelter costs.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: The U.S. economy, American consumers, and the Federal Reserve.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The CPI data was released on Thursday, September 11, 2025.

🎯IMPACT: The headline CPI numbers may give the Federal Reserve a degree of pause at next week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, though Wall Street still anticipates the Fed moving to reduce interest rates.

IN FULL

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) crept up in August. Headline CPI rose 2.9 percent year-over-year, while core CPI increased 3.1 percent. While the numbers suggest that inflation may be stubbornly holding steady just above the Federal Reserve’s two percent target, they also reveal that—despite predictions by most critics—President Donald J. Trump’s tariffs are having little overall impact on prices for American consumers.

Shelter (housing) was the single largest driver of price increases in the month-over-month CPI and is reflected similarly year-over-year. Meanwhile, goods inflation remains muted, undermining assertions that U.S. tariffs on foreign experts would cause prices to surge or reignite inflationary pressure.

Concerningly, the muted goods inflation—when taken with Wednesday’s Producer Price Index (PPI) print—gives credence to concerns about deflationary pressure in the economy. The deviation between the rate of increase in prices between shelter and goods suggests possible lagging demand among consumers for everyday items.

The headline CPI numbers may give the Federal Reserve a degree of pause at next week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. However, the lack of acceleration in goods prices, the deflationary PPI print from Wednesday, and the concerning August jobs numbers—along with the significant downward benchmark revision for the labor market for the end of 2024—have Wall Street still anticipating the Fed moving to reduce interest rates.

Image by Rafael Saldana.

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New Data Shows Inflation FELL in August, Piling Pressure on Fed to Cut Rates.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: The Producer Price Index (PPI) for August fell by 0.1 percent, defying economists’ expectations of a 0.3 percent increase.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: President Donald J. Trump, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.

📍WHEN & WHERE: August’s PPI data was released on Wednesday, September 10, 2025.

🎯IMPACT: The PPI and jobs numbers have shifted the broader interest rate discussion ahead of next week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting from whether the Federal Reserve will cut rates to how much it will need to cut rates.

IN FULL

The Producer Price Index (PPI) for August fell by 0.1 percent, defying economists’ expectations, which predicted a 0.3 percent increase. Importantly, the data suggest that inflation continues to fall, adding further pressure on the Federal Reserve and Chairman Jerome Powell, dubbed ‘Too Late’ by President Donald J. Trump, to begin cutting interest rates at next week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).

“Just out: No Inflation!!! ‘Too Late’ must lower the RATE, BIG, right now. Powell is a total disaster, who doesn’t have a clue!!!” President Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social on Wednesday morning, reacting to the PPI news. The year-over-year headline PPI numbers were even more stunning, falling to 2.6 percent, while expectations were 3.3 percent.

In August, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell signalled the central bank would likely shift its current interest rate policy toward reducing borrowing costs at the September FOMC. The likelihood of a rate cut has only increased since then, with the August jobs report containing strong signs that the U.S. labor market continues to cool.

Concerningly, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) annual benchmark revision suggests there has been little to no real job growth in the U.S. for several years—an indication that the Federal Reserve may have held interest rates too high for too long. The National Pulse reported on Tuesday that the BLS revised downward the total number of jobs created between April 2024 and March 2025 by a shocking 911,000. This follows last year’s revision for April 2023 to March 2024, which saw 818,000 fewer jobs created than initially reported.

The PPI and jobs numbers have shifted the broader interest rate discussion ahead of next week’s FOMC from whether the Federal Reserve will cut rates to how much it will need to cut rates. Increasingly, expectations appear to be pointing to a 50 basis point (bps) cut rather than the 25 bps cut many were forecasting just last week. Among those concerned about the U.S. having entered a possible deflationary cycle, there are mounting calls for an even more aggressive 100 bps cut.

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Biden Added Nearly One Million Fewer Jobs in Final Year than Previously Reported.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: The U.S. economy added nearly one million fewer jobs than previously reported in the final year of the Biden government, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’s (BLS) annual benchmark revision for April 2024 to March 2025.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: The BLS, former President Joe Biden, President Donald J. Trump, and the Federal Reserve.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The annual revision was released by the BLS on Tuesday, September 9, 2025.

🎯IMPACT: The revisions suggest the American economy has been contracting since early last year—possibly even entering a recession beginning in the final year of Biden’s presidential term.

IN FULL

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) on Tuesday released its annual benchmark jobs report revision, revising downward the total number of jobs created between April 2024 and March 2025 by a shocking 911,000. This revision, accounting mostly for the final year of the former Biden government, means the monthly job growth number for much of 2024 stood at only 71,000 per month, instead of the initially reported average of 147,000 per month.

Notably, the benchmark revision indicates the labor market was significantly weakening well before President Donald J. Trump imposed significant global tariffs, and  fuels concerns that the Federal Reserve has based its interest rate policy on faulty economic data for well over a year. In addition, the latest BLS data follows its prior revision from April 2023 to March 2024, which saw 818,000 fewer jobs created than initially reported. The two annual revisions, when combined, show labor market growth in the final two years of the Biden government was overestimated by nearly two million jobs.

The new employment data, coming on the heels of last month’s jobs numbers showing that only 22,000 jobs were added to the economy in August, will only increase pressure on the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates. More troubling, however, is that the revisions suggest the American economy has been contracting since early last year—possibly even being in a recession beginning in the final year of Biden’s presidential term.

While annual revisions to the BLS jobs data are commonplace, significant back-to-back revisions are unusual and give credence to President Trump’s criticism of the agency’s accuracy and methodology when measuring the U.S. labor market. On August 1 of this year, Trump dismissed Dr. Erika McEntarfer as the bureau’s commissioner and questioned the BLS’s credibility following a series of month-to-month downward revisions.

Image by Gage Skidmore.

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Trump Ramps Up Pressure on Powell to Cut Rates Ahead of Pivotal Fed Meeting.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: President Donald J. Trump renewed pressure on the Federal Reserve to slash interest rates on Tuesday, citing experts criticizing the central bank’s handling of rates and calling for significant reforms.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: President Trump, Jay Hatfield—CEO and Portfolio Manager of Infrastructure Capital Advisors, Greg Faranello—Executive Director of AmeriVet Securities, and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.

📍WHEN & WHERE: Tuesday, September 9, 2025.

💬KEY QUOTE: “They don’t believe that money supply matters, it’s like the Pope not believing in Jesus.” – Jay Hatfield

🎯IMPACT: The criticism highlights growing concerns about the Federal Reserve’s approach to monetary policy and its potential consequences for the U.S. economy.

IN FULL

President Donald J. Trump took to Truth Social on Tuesday morning with renewed criticism of the Federal Reserve and its chairman, Jerome Powell. The America First leader cited comments by Jay Hatfield, CEO and Portfolio Manager of Infrastructure Capital Advisors, and Gregory Faranello, Executive Director of AmeriVet Securities, who argue that the central bank’s incompetence—rather than its independence—is the paramount concern.

“If the Fed had followed what we published, they would have raised rates in early 2021. The entire Organization is broken. It needs to be fixed,” Trump, quoting Hatfield, wrote, continuing: “They need to use modern sources of information. We strongly disagree with Ken Griffin. We think Incompetence is more important than to defend theoretical independence. He (‘Too Late!’) has done a terrible job since he adapted a two target? It’s too low, it’s too rigid, they followed Data that’s years delayed.”

Again quoting Hatfield, President Trump wrote: “They don’t believe that money supply matters, it’s like the Pope not believing in Jesus.”

Following up on Hatfield’s call for significant structural and policy reform at the Federal Reserve, President Trump next pointed to Gregory Faranello’s prediction that the central bank will have to significantly slash interest rates over the next few months. Quoting Faranello, the Truth Social post reads: “Chair Powell was late to raise rates, they need to come down here, there’s no question about it. He’s dragging his feet. The Feds going to come down here 50, 75, Maybe 100.”

The National Pulse previously reported that Chairman Powell, during the Fed’s annual Jackson Hole conference in August, signalled the central bank would likely move to cut interest rates at the September meeting of its Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC). While a 25 basis point (bps) cut appears to be the Wall Street consensus, jobs reports—which indicate a significant slowdown in the U.S. labor market—could push the central bank toward a 50bps cut. Some project rates could come down by as much as 100bps by year’s end or early next year.

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Trump Tells Foreign Firms to Employ and Upskill Americans After Hyundai Raid.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: President Donald J. Trump told companies operating in the U.S. to only use foreign labor to train American workers following the largest single-site immigration enforcement operation in Homeland Security history, which saw hundreds of South Korean illegal workers arrested at a Hyundai plant in Georgia.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Hyundai, South Korean nationals, and President Trump.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The operation took place last Thursday at a Hyundai battery plant under construction near Savannah, Georgia. President Trump’s comments came late Sunday in a post on Truth Social.

💬KEY QUOTE: “What we ask in return is that you hire and train American Workers.” – Donald Trump

🎯IMPACT: President Trump floated a possible policy change where some high-skilled foreign labor would only be authorized in order to train American workers in the battery and computer manufacturing sectors.

IN FULL

President Donald J. Trump says foreign companies operating in the United States should only use foreign workers to train their American employees. The comments were made in a late Sunday night post on Truth Social, following last Thursday’s largest single-site enforcement operation in Department of Homeland Security (DHS) history, which detained hundreds of South Korean illegal immigrant workers at a Hyundai battery plant under construction near Savannah, Georgia.

“Following the Immigration Enforcement Operation on the Hyundai Battery Plant in Georgia, I am hereby calling on all Foreign Companies investing in the United States to please respect our Nation’s Immigration Laws,” Trump wrote, continuing: “Your Investments are welcome, and we encourage you to LEGALLY bring your very smart people, with great technical talent, to build World Class products, and we will make it quickly and legally possible for you to do so. What we ask in return is that you hire and train American Workers.”

“Together, we will all work hard to make our Nation not only productive, but closer in unity than ever before,” the America First leader added.

The operation resulted in the detention of 475 workers, most of whom were South Korean nationals. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials stated that some had entered the country illegally, while others had overstayed visas or violated visa waiver conditions that prohibited employment. None of the detained workers were charged with crimes, according to Steven Schrank, the lead Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) agent in Georgia.

South Korea’s government expressed concern over the detentions, with Foreign Minister Cho Hyun planning to travel to the U.S. to discuss the matter. On Sunday, South Korea announced that more than 300 detained workers would be released and repatriated via charter plane. Kang Hoon-sik, chief of staff for President Lee Jae Myung, confirmed that negotiations with U.S. officials had been finalized.

The incident has raised tensions between Washington and Seoul, coming just months after South Korea committed $350 billion in U.S. investments as part of a broader economic agreement. Trump, speaking to reporters at Joint Base Andrews on Sunday, suggested that the U.S. and South Korea could collaborate to allow their nationals to train American workers for roles in battery and computer manufacturing.

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Trump Moves to Deport Hundreds of Korean Illegal Workers.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: Trump administration officials will deport 300 South Korean migrants who were working illegally at a taxpayer-funded construction site in Georgia.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), South Korean workers, Hyundai Motor Group, LG Energy Solution Ltd., and Border Czar Tom Homan.

📍WHEN & WHERE: The arrests occurred at a construction site in Ellabell, Georgia, where a factory funded by over $1 billion in government aid is being built.

💬KEY QUOTE: “These companies that hire illegal aliens, they undercut the competition of paying U.S. citizen salaries,” said Tom Homan.

🎯IMPACT: The deportations are expected to delay Hyundai’s construction project and highlight the ongoing issue of illegal labor undercutting American wages.

IN FULL

The Trump administration will move to deport an estimated 300 South Korean illegal immigrants found to be working illegally at a Hyundai Motor Group and LG Energy Solution Ltd. factory construction site in Ellabell, Georgia. The arrests, which took place on Thursday, saw over 500 people detained, including 23 Mexicans in addition to the South Koreans. According to the Trump administration, those detained at the facility—which received $1 billion in U.S. taxpayer funding—either lacked proper immigrant work visas, had expired work visas, or were working despite only holding non-work visas.

The Hyundai immigration raid and arrests sparked a diplomatic row with South Korea’s government, and pushback from pro-illegal immigrant labor advocates like the CATO Institute, who argue it is economically desirable to replace American workers with cheap foreign labor. Trump White House Border Czar Tom Homan emphasized the economic impact of such hiring practices, stating, “These companies that hire illegal aliens, they undercut the competition of paying U.S. citizen salaries.”

Homan also shared his personal experience, saying, “I had to call five different companies before I had a company that guaranteed me a legal workforce. I talked to one company, just a father and son, who laid off 20 citizen employees because they couldn’t afford—they couldn’t win a bid, because the competition were bidding a lot less for a job because they were paying their employees a lot less to work because they’re illegally in the United States.”

The South Korean workers reportedly entered the U.S. using B-1/B-2 tourist/business visas or Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) waivers. Hyundai, a repeat violator of labor rules, is expected to face delays and increased costs as it replaces the deported workers with American labor. The arrests are part of broader efforts by the Trump administration to enforce immigration laws and prioritize high-skill, high-productivity sectors in the U.S. economy.

Hyundai has faced scrutiny before for labor violations, including the use of child labor in Alabama factories. Corporate executives often shield themselves from accountability by outsourcing hiring to third-party staffing agencies. Despite pushback from pro-illegal immigrant labor advocates, the Trump administration has emphasized the importance of enforcing laws to protect American workers and wages.

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Trump Threatens Retaliatory Tariffs Against Europe for U.S. Tech Firm Fines.

PULSE POINTS

WHAT HAPPENED: President Donald J. Trump has threatened the European Union (EU) with retaliatory tariffs over huge fines directed at American tech giants like Google and Apple.

👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: President Donald J. Trump, U.S. tech firms, and the EU.

📍WHEN & WHERE: President Trump announced the possible retaliation on September 5 on Truth Social.

💬KEY QUOTE: “Europe today ‘hit’ another great American company, Google, with a $3.5 billion fine, effectively taking money that would otherwise go to American Investments and Jobs.” – President Trump.

🎯IMPACT: The threat could see the EU back off on fines, or be forced to pay the equivalent in tariffs back to the United States.

IN FULL

President Donald J. Trump is taking a hard line against the European Union (EU) after its regulators imposed a massive $3.5 billion fine on Google. The President is accusing Brussels of unfairly targeting American tech companies and threatening to launch a formal trade response.

“Europe today ‘hit’ another great American company, Google, with a $3.5 billion fine, effectively taking money that would otherwise go to American Investments and Jobs,” Trump said in a statement released Friday. He also pointed to Apple’s previous $17 billion fine in the EU, saying, “They should get their money back!”

Trump warned that his administration would not tolerate “discriminatory actions” against U.S. firms and threatened to initiate a Section 301 trade investigation, which would pave the way for tariffs or other retaliatory measures. “We cannot let this happen to brilliant and unprecedented American Ingenuity,” he stated.

The America First leader’s remarks come amid a broader dispute between the United States and the European Union over trade, taxation, and regulation. Earlier this year, Trump threatened 200 percent tariffs on EU wine, champagne, and other luxury goods, describing the EU as “one of the most hostile and abusive taxing and tariffing authorities in the world.”

Beyond economics, the Trump administration is increasingly voicing concerns about free speech restrictions in the EU, particularly in Germany. Recent U.S. criticisms have focused on arrests tied to social media posts and sweeping EU digital content laws.

The German government has dismissed U.S. objections, insisting its laws—which recently saw a German woman receive a harsher sentence for insulting a migrant gang rapist than the migrant received for the gang rape—are necessary to fight so-called hate speech.

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