Speaker | Time | Text |
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Why don't I do this? | ||
Why don't I have our Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnick, give a little description of the deal pretty quickly. | ||
And then the good side, the very nice side, we'll be speaking about it also, maybe. | ||
So you get pretty equal. | ||
I think it's just been a deal that was, we thought, very complicated. | ||
It became very simple. | ||
It's opening up. | ||
The country that we really didn't have the kind of access to that I would have thought. | ||
I was surprised. | ||
I think it's why the deal never got done before. | ||
It was, you know, they've been working on this deal for 25 years. | ||
And we got it done, and we got it done. | ||
Really, it's going to be great for both countries. | ||
So, Sarut, if you could go, and then somebody else, you may have, you'll pick whoever you want who'd like to do it. | ||
I have a feeling you're going to do it, right? | ||
So, you guys go ahead, and then we'll take questions right after that. | ||
But I think you'll get a pretty good understanding of it. | ||
How big it is. | ||
It's a very large deal, very big deal. | ||
And Howard, go ahead. | ||
So the UK is the sixth largest economy in the world and the fourth largest that we export to, right? | ||
So it's a huge market, a top 10 market. | ||
If you remember Liberation Day, they were at 10% because we have balanced trade with the UK. | ||
They say they have a surplus, but of course that counts gold bullion. | ||
So let's just call it balanced trade. | ||
So how do you open up a market in balanced trade? | ||
People think it's impossible. | ||
They've always thought it was impossible until President Trump came on the scene and changed the way things work. | ||
So here's what we've got. | ||
We've opened up new market access. | ||
Ethanol, beef, machinery. | ||
All the agricultural products. | ||
They've agreed to open their markets, and that will add $5 billion of opportunity to American exporters. | ||
So the question is, why would they do that now? | ||
Because they've never done it before. | ||
And we still have a 10% tariff on, which will produce $6 billion of revenue for the United States. | ||
So the idea was, how do they keep their jobs, protect their economy, and do the best for their people while opening the market for us? | ||
And the ways they studied it, their team was exceptional, and they tried to figure out the markets that they're importing from other people and try to send them over to America. | ||
So why were they always favoring others and not us? | ||
And what they've done is they've found the ways to do that so that we have new access. | ||
Right? | ||
But the UK workers are protected. | ||
And that was the balance. | ||
So you've got... | ||
We did a deal with them in automobiles. | ||
And you know, if you're not building here, we charge you a 25% tariff. | ||
But the president... | ||
And by the way, I want to make this clear. | ||
While Jameson and I worked hard, this was the president's deal. | ||
And people think, oh, that's not the way it works. | ||
If you got to sit next to him, I have the best dealmaker to my left. | ||
And if you don't fit... | ||
unidentified
|
That we take advantage of him calling the Prime Minister and getting that deal done. | |
You don't understand who's the President of the United States. | ||
So he's the closer. | ||
He gets deals done that we could never get done because he understands business. | ||
He understands deals. | ||
And that's why we're here today. | ||
He agreed they could send 100,000 cars into America and only pay a 10% tariff. | ||
And that protects their car industry. | ||
And remember, we do 16 million cars a year. | ||
So this is only like 0.6%. | ||
But for the UK auto people, this is tens of thousands of jobs that the president agreed that he would protect for them. | ||
So he made that deal, right? | ||
Then steel and aluminum. | ||
Their steel business has been destroyed like everybody else has been destroyed by people dumping steel into their markets. | ||
And British Steel had announced it was closing down. | ||
So the British government, as part of this deal... | ||
Nationalized British Steel, and they're going to match the kinds of models we do. | ||
They'll put tariffs on, they'll put quotas on. | ||
They want to do it with America so they can be part of the resurgence of steel and aluminum in America. | ||
And that saves them, again, thousands and thousands of jobs. | ||
So if you go step by step, aero and commercial planes. | ||
They sell Rolls-Royce engines to Boeing. | ||
We've agreed to let Rolls-Royce engines and those kind of plane parts to come over tariff-free. | ||
And what you're going to hear today is there's going to be an announcement in the UK that they are buying $10 billion worth of Boeing planes later today. | ||
But I'm going to let the name of the airline announce it because that's theirs to do. | ||
But part of this deal was always to do it together. | ||
And to do it strong. | ||
And you can see the numbers on this board. | ||
Everything about this board works exceptionally well for the United States of America. | ||
It lays out the plan that you can work with us in autos. | ||
You can work with us with aero and commercial. | ||
You can work with us in pharmaceuticals. | ||
If you have a supply chain that is secure and protected in national security. | ||
So we feel really good about the deal. | ||
You've heard the Prime Minister. | ||
He feels really good about the deal, right? | ||
And we started at 10% and we ended at 10%. | ||
And the market for America is better. | ||
And this is a perfect example of why Donald Trump produced Liberation Day. | ||
People don't understand. | ||
He gets things done. | ||
In a matter of time, this would have taken Jameson and I Three years, maybe. | ||
And instead, we got it done in 45 days, certainly, because we work for Donald Trump. | ||
So, Jameson, my partner in all this, maybe, Jameson, you'd like to talk a little, and then we'll turn it over to the UK. | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
Happy to do that. | ||
Everyone has had great remarks. | ||
I just have to echo the President and the Prime Minister when we talk about VE Day. | ||
This is something we've been waiting for for decades, and there is no more appropriate day to do this. | ||
When we step back and we look back a few weeks from now, or months from now, or years from now, we're going to look back at this day and better appreciate the significance, I think. | ||
And I'll just say as well, in terms of negotiating, I mean, the UK negotiators, you know, we've got one right here, did an incredible job, right? | ||
This is why you win wars, right? | ||
When you act like this. | ||
And the ambassador, he knows more about trade than a lot of us here, based on his background. | ||
And I would say on this deal, Mr. President, what we've shown... | ||
Is that it is time to change the way we do trade. | ||
People said we couldn't do a global tariff. | ||
We did a global tariff. | ||
They said no one would want to deal with us. | ||
People want a deal. | ||
They said no one would give offers. | ||
You saw that stack of offers I showed you yesterday, all those countries. | ||
Said we wouldn't get deals, and here we are with a deal with the sixth largest economy. | ||
We've agreed to have fair reciprocal trade, and we've done it in record time. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Great job. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, Mr. President, thank you very much indeed in hosting us this morning. | |
And thank you very much indeed also for that very typical 11th hour intervention by you with your phone call to the President demanding even more out of this deal than any of us expected. | ||
So thank you for that. | ||
The Prime Minister was delighted, obviously, to take that call late at night. | ||
But you took it to another level, and I think the point I would make is twofold. | ||
One is that if we're going to rebalance and rebuild international trade in a way that serves all our interests, then we're better doing that together than separately and apart, and that's what we're on a mission to do. | ||
But secondly, you've done what you said you would do. | ||
You said to the Prime Minister, When he came and we visited in the Oval, that you would do a good trade deal with the United Kingdom, that you would do it at pace, and that we would be first. | ||
And you have delivered that. | ||
You've been true to your words. | ||
So thank you very much indeed for that. | ||
For us, it's not the end. | ||
It's the end just of the beginning. | ||
I mean, there is yet more we can do in reducing tariffs and trade barriers so as to open up our markets to each other even more than we're agreeing to do today. | ||
But it also provides us with the platform, the springboard, to do what I think will be even more valuable for both our countries in the future, and that's creating a technology partnership. | ||
Between the United States and the United Kingdom so that we can harness science and technology in order to create future industries and future jobs. | ||
And to do that together in the way we work so closely already in the national security and defense area, we can just take that to yet further areas. | ||
of science, enterprise and endeavours. | ||
So we're looking forward to doing that in the coming months. | ||
You've launched us extremely well today. | ||
It just, in my view, as the Prime Minister has said, just shows what two countries who trust each other, who are confident in each other and are familiar with each other can do, not just for ourselves. | ||
But for those in the rest of the world who need to benefit from a bigger and better international trading system. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Beautifully stated. | ||
What a beautiful accent. | ||
I'd like to have that accent. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
My mother would be proud. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
The Press: James Matthews from Dan Hughes. | ||
unidentified
|
Can I ask, why Britain and why now? | |
You've described this deal as a full and comprehensive deal, and yet we've just heard from Mr. Mattel said it's the end of the beginning. | ||
Clearly, there's much more work still to do. | ||
With respect, are you overstating the reach and significance of this deal? | ||
Because you're a president who needs a result at a difficult time. | ||
I think that it's a great deal for both parties. | ||
It's for us. | ||
We're opened up. | ||
I didn't know how close it was. | ||
Quite close, the market, as you know. | ||
The U.K., and it opens up a tremendous market for us, and it works out very well, very well. | ||
And a lot of assets, you see the chart, and those are tremendous assets. | ||
But we've been trying, and when you say, why us, meaning your country, we've been trying for years, and they've been trying for years to make a deal, including when I was in the first term. | ||
It would always be people talking, but they weren't getting it done. | ||
Twenty-five years before that, they were trying always to make a deal, a very significant deal. | ||
I actually, until I looked at the numbers, I didn't realize this is a very conclusive deal, but we think we can grow it even from that. | ||
But this is a maxed-out deal, not like you said it. | ||
You said it really incorrectly. | ||
This is a maxed-out deal that we're going to make bigger, and we make it bigger through growth. | ||
Tremendous assets involved. | ||
I was surprised to see how big your country is in trade, actually. | ||
One of the biggest in technology and so many other things. | ||
It's agriculture. | ||
I really didn't know. | ||
Depending on your definition, it's from four to five to six. | ||
That's pretty big in the world. | ||
So I was very impressed by that. | ||
But we're going to take it to new levels. | ||
It's a very big deal right now. | ||
But I think it... | ||
It's going to grow. | ||
Just of its own volition, it's going to grow. | ||
And over time, there'll be changes made. | ||
There'll be adjustments made. | ||
Because we're flexible, we'll see things that we can do even better. | ||
But it's very conclusive, and we think everyone's going to be happy. | ||
And the people of your country are going to be very impressed with the result. | ||
And they'll be able to buy from more people. | ||
They'll be able to price things differently. | ||
They'll be able to get some products that aren't available to them now that we make. | ||
Better than anybody in the world. | ||
And it's just something that... | ||
It's a great thing that it came together. | ||
It's so nice because we have... | ||
Many countries want to make a deal. | ||
And many countries are very unhappy that we happen to choose this one, to be honest with you. | ||
But it's a long time. | ||
Our oldest ally, or just about. | ||
I guess a couple of people claim that too. | ||
But let's put it right at the top. | ||
I think it's going to be something very special for UK and special for the United States. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Mr. President. | |
Reagan Reese with The Daily Caller. | ||
How close are you to more deals, and when do you expect the next to be announced? | ||
Well, very close. | ||
We have numerous deals. | ||
I know Howard's going back. | ||
As soon as this is finished, your press conference, he's got numerous. | ||
And Scott, who's right over here, who's fantastic, by the way. | ||
You were great on television this morning. | ||
I watched you. | ||
unidentified
|
You gave them a little lesson in the world and economics. | |
But Scott is going to be going to Switzerland, meeting with China. | ||
And, you know, they very much want to make a deal. | ||
We can all play games. | ||
Who made the first call? | ||
Who didn't make the-- it doesn't matter. | ||
It only matters what happens in that room. | ||
But I will tell you that China very much wants to make a deal. | ||
We'll see how that works out. | ||
Every country throughout the last 40, 50 years has literally ripped off the United States on trade, on military, on protection, on all the different things. | ||
And we are now making fair deals. | ||
And in this case, it's great because we really weren't very much involved. | ||
You have the European Union, which is, I think, you know, I think you made the right decision years ago. | ||
I don't know if you remember, I was opening up Turnberry the day that you were voting. | ||
And they asked me, would it happen or would it not happen? | ||
I said, no, I think they're going to go their own separate way. | ||
I think it's better for them. | ||
And they did. | ||
I think it's going to end up being a very smart decision. | ||
But a big part of that decision was always that you'd be able to make a deal with the United States. | ||
And they were unable to do that, but now they made it. | ||
And it's a tremendous, you know, it's very important. | ||
That was always a big part of your decision on Brexit. | ||
And they were never able to make that deal. | ||
It was, you know, it was a tough one. | ||
And this one was, it's amazing with time, this one just went very smoothly, went quickly and smoothly, and a lot of common sense, as I like to say. | ||
It's tremendous common sense, but it's going to make your country much bigger in terms of trade, and it's going to make our country much bigger in terms of trade, too. | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
Tom Bateman at the BBC. | |
Thank you, Mr. President. | ||
You mentioned meat and beef exports. | ||
The UK currently doesn't accept American beef because of its own food standards. | ||
Are you calling on the UK to accept all American beef and chicken products? | ||
Well, I think they'll take what they want. | ||
We have plenty of it. | ||
We have every classification you can have. | ||
As you know, Bobby Kennedy is doing a tremendous job, and he's, I think, probably heading toward your system with no chemical, no this, no that. | ||
I think we're heading that way, it seems to be. | ||
But we have that also. | ||
So we're a very big country. | ||
We have a lot of beef. | ||
We're a very big country, so it'll be great. | ||
Yes. | ||
Let's talk about American beef really quickly, and it can't be understated. | ||
I'm Brooke Rollins, by the way, how important this deal is and what this means to American farmers and ranchers. | ||
Specific to the beef, this is going to exponentially increase our beef exports. | ||
And to be very clear, American beef is the safest. | ||
The best quality and the crown jewel of American agriculture for the world. | ||
So I think a really important part of this deal isn't just the ethanol reducing of tariffs from 19 to zero, which for our row croppers is a huge deal, but also for beef. | ||
And as we move forward, I know our incredible trade team is looking at all of the meats, all of the produce, really all of our agriculture exports. | ||
And I don't know if there's an industry that has been treated more unfairly and has suffered more than our agriculture industry. | ||
So we look forward to it. | ||
I'll be in the UK. | ||
I think we could say that we have the best in the world, the best tractors, the best everything in the world. | ||
They say that our agriculture is second to none, you understand. | ||
It'll be a great asset. | ||
People are going to be able to have options, choice, and they'll have more of it. | ||
And that usually means lower prices. | ||
How about we'll do you, and then you? | ||
unidentified
|
Go ahead. | |
I have a question for the Italian TV. | ||
Daniele Compatangelo, LA70, TV 2000, Prime Time Media. | ||
So, congratulations for the deal. | ||
We see a big revenues from the chart. | ||
But what's the rest of Europe? | ||
It's a victory day, but other European countries, it seems like they're losing the trade. | ||
We decided to make a deal with Europe. | ||
We have found that the European Union treated us extremely unfairly, very difficult. | ||
And hurt themselves in doing so. | ||
And they very much want to make a deal. | ||
We'll be dealing with them. | ||
We are dealing with them currently. | ||
So that'll cover pretty much the rest of it. | ||
But this was separate. | ||
Because of Brexit, in particular, this was a separate deal. | ||
It always seems so natural. | ||
I mean, all the media would say that this seemed to be like, why did this happen 25 years? | ||
Why didn't it happen a long time ago? | ||
And it was always amazing to me. | ||
Somebody would say, hey, we got to make a deal. | ||
We have to make a deal. | ||
But this deal just fell into place. | ||
The Prime Minister did a fantastic job. | ||
His representatives are total professionals, and they got along well, and it just seemed to work. | ||
And I think one of the reasons it did is because we blew up the whole system. | ||
If we would have just been dealing with you separately or, you know, country by country, we blew up the whole system. | ||
It was very fair to the United — very unfair to the United States. | ||
I think because of that, this worked out so nicely. | ||
And I'm honored that it was the first deal. | ||
unidentified
|
Please. | |
Sir, you mentioned? | ||
Well, why don't you go in the back, yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, thank you, sir. | |
I'm with the London Times. | ||
I would say this is a great day for James Bond, because now Aston Martins will be available to America. | ||
But it would be even better by extending it to film. | ||
You've talked about a big tariff on films, and we'd like to know if there'd be relief on British... | ||
Well, we're going to have a discussion on that separately. | ||
And as you know, we're putting tariffs on that particular film, he said, the movie makers, and we're going to be doing some tariffs to get them because a lot of them have left this country. | ||
They all live here. | ||
The money comes from here. | ||
Everything comes from here, but they make them in other countries. | ||
So we're going to do something to bring them back, maybe to a large extent. | ||
James Bond has nothing to worry about that, I can tell you. | ||
And, you know, Sean Connery was a friend of mine. | ||
Sean Connery was responsible for my getting zoning in Aberdeen. | ||
He said, let the bloody bloke build his golf courses. | ||
I was like four years into the process, and it was impossible in Aberdeen. | ||
I don't know. | ||
He just stood up one day and he said that. | ||
As soon as he said that, I got the approvals in about two minutes. | ||
So he was a great guy, Sean Connery, and a great character. | ||
unidentified
|
Are you going to Scotland and to the UK? | |
We have a lot of investment over there. | ||
We have Turnberry, Aberdeen. | ||
We have, as you know, Dunebeg in Ireland, right on the ocean. | ||
They're all on the ocean. | ||
I only have interest if they're on the ocean. | ||
And we have... | ||
We have good investments over there. | ||
Beautiful. | ||
Yes? | ||
unidentified
|
The Press: Mr. President, if the talks go well this weekend between Secretary Bessett and Ambassador Greer with their Chinese counterparts, not preemptively, but if the talks go well, would you then consider lowering the tariff rate on China? | |
The President: Well, it could be. | ||
I mean, we're going to see. | ||
Right now, you can't get any higher. | ||
It's at 145, so we know it's coming down. | ||
I think we're going to have a very good relationship. | ||
You know, I always got along very well with President Xi. | ||
That relationship was-- Greatly disturbed by COVID, when COVID came in. | ||
But we get along very well now. | ||
I mean, the relationship was hurt with a lot of people, a lot of countries, when COVID came in. | ||
But I think we're going to have a very good relationship. | ||
I expect to have a very good relationship with China, Scott. | ||
I think it's a very friendly meeting. | ||
They look forward to doing it in an elegant way. | ||
China, as you know, has a tremendous... | ||
Trade surplus with us. | ||
And we can't, you know, we just can't have that. | ||
But I think it's going to be very good for both countries. | ||
I would like to see China opened. | ||
You know, one of the big things here is, and nobody would know this, but the U.K. was largely closed. | ||
It was very much closed to trade. | ||
And now it's opened. | ||
And a lot of the financial reporters are very happy about that because so much, I listen to them. | ||
I hope they get countries opened up. | ||
And then you compete on a fair basis. | ||
But you can't compete when you're not allowed to go there. | ||
China would be the number one example of that. | ||
You know, it's very close. | ||
We almost had it last time before COVID. | ||
And that didn't work out. | ||
But we made a great deal with China. | ||
They had to buy $50 billion worth of our food products. | ||
And it was a great deal doing very well for our farmers. | ||
And then when Biden came in, as usual, nothing happened. | ||
You know, he didn't enforce it. | ||
And it got less, less, less, and ultimately, you know, it destroyed a great deal. | ||
That was a great deal. | ||
But, no, I think that we're going to have a good weekend with China. | ||
I think they have a lot to gain. | ||
I do think they have far more to gain than we do, in a sense, but we're going to have a good, I think we're going to have a very good weekend. | ||
unidentified
|
Will you speak to Xi after the weekend talks? | |
Yeah, sure, depending on what Scott says. | ||
We sort of, Scott is doing certain countries. | ||
Howard's doing certain countries. | ||
I mean, I wish I had like 10 more of each. | ||
Then we could do them all at one time. | ||
But there will be a time. | ||
We'll do a number of them. | ||
And then there'll be a time, I think I can say this, Scott and Howard, where we're just going to say, because we understand the countries, we understand what they want, where we're just going to make the deal. | ||
In other words, we don't need the country involvement because we've already had it. | ||
And we'll say this particular country, which had big surpluses, let's say, we had therefore deficits, that this particular country is going to pay a 25% tariff or a 30% or a 50% or a 10% or whatever it may be. | ||
This was, I think we should explain it, Howard. | ||
One of the things we did here that we'll rarely do is on cars. | ||
We took it from 25 to 10 on Rolls-Royce because Rolls-Royce is not going to be built here. | ||
I wouldn't even ask them to do that. | ||
It's a very special car. | ||
And it's a very limited number, too. | ||
It's not, you know, one of the monster car companies that makes millions of cars. | ||
They make a very small number of cars that are super luxury. | ||
And that includes Bentley and Jaguar. | ||
So we have some very special cars. | ||
So in order to help that industry, and that's really, you know, handmade stuff. | ||
They've been doing it for a long time in the same location. | ||
And I said, yeah, that would be good. | ||
Let's help them out with that one. | ||
But that's different than a car company that comes out and makes millions of cars, which they'll be doing in our country. | ||
They're going to build. | ||
We have many, many factories, car plants being built or going to be built very soon. | ||
I think we can say that we'll be close to $10 trillion of investment. | ||
I think we're actually at that number now, if you add up some of the ones we haven't heard about yet. | ||
I mean, we have some going up right now. | ||
They have plants going up, and they haven't even spoken to us. | ||
They're doing it because of the tariffs. | ||
And tariffs have always been used against us. | ||
And I never understood. | ||
I used to sit back. | ||
As you know, China paid hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs when I was president. | ||
But until then, China never paid anything. | ||
And, you know, they really did a big number on us from the standpoint of trade. | ||
But we are using tariffs now for our benefit. | ||
We have now close to $10 trillion. | ||
Think of that, $10 trillion. | ||
If you look at the past administration, and we're talking about over, you know, essentially two months, because we could say three, but it took a little while to get the office in perfect shape, right? | ||
It took a little while to get things done. | ||
But once we started... | ||
When you think of that, close to $10 trillion of investment. | ||
You've had years where the United States wouldn't do that in a whole — wouldn't do $1 trillion in a year, wouldn't do anywhere near $1 trillion. | ||
We did $10 trillion in two months. | ||
So it's amazing what's happening. | ||
We're getting calls from — and that has to do with chips, has to do with cars. | ||
We used to make chips. | ||
We had Intel, and we used to make chips. | ||
We had a monopoly on chips. | ||
Everything was made here and now. | ||
Over a period of years because of presidents that didn't know what they were doing. | ||
They allowed that business to be stolen from us. | ||
Most of it moved to Taiwan. | ||
And you probably were in the same position, right? | ||
Because you had a lot of the chip-making capacity. | ||
But they moved it in. | ||
And if we would have said, that's fine. | ||
If you want to move it to Taiwan, that's good. | ||
But if you want to sell back into the United States, we're going to put a 50 percent or 100 percent tariff on. | ||
They would have never left. | ||
But we had people sitting here that didn't understand that, and it's too bad. | ||
But now they're coming back, because I'm saying it. | ||
I'm saying it about 40 years too late. | ||
But they're coming back. | ||
As you know, we have the biggest chipmakers in the world spending, in one case, $300 billion. | ||
In one case, $500 billion. | ||
Same as Apple. | ||
And in another case, $200 billion. | ||
And we're going to have a large share, a very, very substantial share of the chipmaking market. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be a friendly visit, but do you expect that it will just be a formality to break the ice, or are they going to get into substantive negotiations? | |
I believe so, yes. | ||
I believe it's substantive, yes. | ||
I think people like to say, yes, we're having a meeting to meet. | ||
Well, we're meeting, so what are we going to do? | ||
Talk about meeting again? | ||
So, I think it's going to be substantive. | ||
I think we can say that, right, Scott? | ||
Very substantive. | ||
Now, China wants to do something. | ||
They have to at this point. | ||
You know, essentially, they made a trillion dollars a year, and now they have absolutely no business because of the tariffs. | ||
They have no business, and they want to have business. | ||
And we want them to have business. | ||
We want them to do well. | ||
We want them to do very well. | ||
So I think it's going to be very substantive. | ||
unidentified
|
Because business has slowed down, as you mentioned. | |
In China. | ||
unidentified
|
But we're seeing, as a result, the ports here in the U.S. The traffic has really slowed and now thousands of dock workers and truck drivers are worried about their jobs. | |
That means we lose less money. | ||
When I see that, that means we lose less money. | ||
Look, China was making over a trillion, 1.1 trillion in my opinion. | ||
You know, different numbers from 500 billion to a trillion or a trillion. | ||
I think it was 1.1 trillion. | ||
And frankly, if we didn't do business, we would have been better off. | ||
Okay, you understand that. | ||
So when you say it's slowed down, that's a good thing, not a bad thing. | ||
But we're going to make it so they can, I'd like to say they can do better, actually, in terms of the bottom line. | ||
We'd like to see China opened up so we can compete in China and, you know, give people something that they've never had, you know, access to something. | ||
That would be great for the world. | ||
It would be great for our businesses. | ||
And I think it would be great for friendship. | ||
I really expect a lot of people to think I'm a militant guy. | ||
I'm really not. | ||
I think that... | ||
Trade can bring a greater friendship with China. | ||
It can be something good. | ||
But, you know, one of the things that I know Scott's going to be talking about very high on the list is open up and let our businesses go into China. | ||
Because when you talk about a closed country, that's a really closed country. | ||
And I think it would be great if it was opened up, give people a lot of choice, and would create a lot of jobs, a lot of everything. | ||
So I think it would be a great thing for China. | ||
And that's going to be one of the things we'll be discussing, like we discussed with UK. | ||
Yeah, please. | ||
unidentified
|
The Press: So what does Britain have to do for you to drop the baseline 10 percent tariff? | |
The President: Well, I think that's set because that has to do with a lot of different things, including past. | ||
You know, there are a lot of past things that we talk about. | ||
This is very inclusive. | ||
We included everything. | ||
And that's pretty well said. | ||
Yeah, please. | ||
unidentified
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The Press: Yeah, Mr. President. | |
The 10% baseline tariff remaining in place, is that a template for these future trade deals? | ||
No. | ||
Is it going to stay in every case? | ||
No, that's a low number. | ||
They made a good deal. | ||
Many, some will be much higher because they have massive trade surpluses. | ||
And, you know, in many cases, they didn't treat us right. | ||
One thing with the U.K., they had, you know, somewhat closed. | ||
Not like a China, as an example. | ||
But they always treated us with great respect. | ||
They treated us with great respect. | ||
The template of Ken is probably the lowest, and therefore they made that deal. | ||
But we've had just a very special relationship with them. | ||
Like, I won't do that deal with cars, unless somebody shows me that there's another kind of a car that's comparable to a Rolls-Royce, then there aren't too many. | ||
This is a good commercial for Rolls-Royce. | ||
They're going to order a lot of cars. | ||
unidentified
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Mr. President, I wonder whether you... | |
I'd like to buy. | ||
I mean, well, the last time this happened, I ended up... | ||
I would be happy to suggest a discount, obviously a very modest discount. | ||
I've had many of them, actually. | ||
You know, the last time that happened, I ended up buying a Tesla. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Mary-Margaret Olahe with Daily Wire. | ||
I had a question about the UK deal today. | ||
I heard there was talk that... | ||
Part of the agreement would depend on whether the UK would respect free speech and freedom of religion. | ||
I know the VP is really interested in that and talked about that earlier this year. | ||
Was there any assurances that you guys got on that front? | ||
You want to handle that? | ||
Yeah, that was not part of the conversation. | ||
Our conversation was an economic conversation from start to finish, closed by the president yesterday. | ||
This was a business deal. | ||
Open their markets and also protect their workers. | ||
Grow our markets and help our markets. | ||
This is about business religion. | ||
You know, business is sort of a semi-religion, but not nearly as important. | ||
I don't want to get myself into it. | ||
unidentified
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Mr. President, will you be asking China to help you close, you know, the gap between Ukraine and Russia? | |
I think so, yeah. | ||
I think it's a natural thing to ask. | ||
unidentified
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What do you expect? | |
Sure. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I think we're... | ||
Making good progress. | ||
Fighting is a little bit different than it was. | ||
I think if we weren't involved, Russia would be, you know, going at it to maybe get the whole thing. | ||
Without our involvement, they'd be able to get it. | ||
unidentified
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Because we supplied a lot of different things, foolishly. | |
But we've been sort of paid back by doing the rare earth deal that I talked about before. | ||
I think that... | ||
No, I think that we will be very much involved in trying to get that bloodbath. | ||
It's a bloodbath. | ||
It's a horrible situation. | ||
5,000. | ||
It's really more than that. | ||
But it's 5,000 soldiers on average a week, mostly soldiers, are being killed. | ||
Young, beautiful people. | ||
I mean, they're being killed. | ||
I see the satellite pictures coming back, body parts lying all over the fields, heads and arms. | ||
It's so terrible. | ||
I've never seen anything like it, actually. | ||
And if we can get that stopped, that would be a great accomplishment. | ||
And we're trying very hard. | ||
And I think we're close. | ||
And Mr. Whitcoff is talking constantly back and forth. | ||
He's a real professional who's got a great relationship with both countries. | ||
And I think we have a good chance. | ||
And likewise, we're trying to work on Iran to get that solved without having to get into any bombing. | ||
As we say, big bombing. | ||
I don't want to do that. | ||
I want them to work. | ||
I want them to be very successful. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you, Mr. President. | |
Edward Lawrence from Fox Business. | ||
On the non-market barriers, how did you get the UK to bend? | ||
And what was the 11th hour deal or ask? | ||
Well, I think it was really just a part of the overall. | ||
I mean, they have so many things that are so good for them, it's going to be so good for the country. | ||
And that was sort of easy. | ||
We had non-market, I call it non-market or non-monetary trade barriers. | ||
And we had quite a few of them, not nearly as bad as some countries. | ||
Some countries have, you know, they have virtually no tariff, but the rest of it is so brutal you can't do business with them, right? | ||
So it's a very important question, actually. | ||
No, I think the overall deal just worked out very well from their standpoint. | ||
They were willing to give that in order to get other things, and you might want to speak to that, Mr. Abbas. | ||
unidentified
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The point about the deal is that we will continue reducing tariffs and non-tariff barriers. | |
This is a continuing It's a picture. | ||
It's a movie. | ||
It's not a still picture here. | ||
It's a movie. | ||
It continues. | ||
And we're both committed to freeing up trade between our countries. | ||
We're both committed to freeing up investment between our countries. | ||
And the point about this deal is that it provides a very good template and a very good launch pad for what we can continue to do and build on in the future. | ||
And that's what we're both determined to do. | ||
The President: You know, many of the-- well, we're going to not say. | ||
The President: How do you tweet us? | ||
The President: Many of the-- we'll keep it confidential. | ||
How about just one more little thing, right? | ||
Well, it got the deal closed, and it was handled very well from the other side, too. | ||
But many of these things that we're talking about-- we've been talking about this for 25 years. | ||
It's hard to explain when-- If you weren't sitting behind this beautiful Resolo desk, you just wouldn't get it. | ||
I have been hearing about making a deal with UK for 25 years. | ||
And especially around the time of Brexit. | ||
They wanted to make a deal, so they came out of Brexit and they make a deal. | ||
And it just couldn't be done. | ||
It couldn't be done. | ||
Good people. | ||
And this is a bigger deal. | ||
This is a much bigger, better, stronger deal for both of us than we ever even contemplated before. | ||
It's a big deal. | ||
unidentified
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Virtually everyone said that it would end in failure, it would end in tears, and it's ended in exactly the opposite. | |
But, Mr. President, can I say that that is due to Secretary Lutnik and Ambassador Greer have been absolutely fantastic. | ||
But yesterday I received a call, a very diplomatic call, that just edged things over the line, and that was from your new ambassador. | ||
In the United Kingdom. | ||
Who is terrific. | ||
Warren Stevens, he's here. | ||
Where is Warren? | ||
unidentified
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He's flying to London tomorrow night. | |
He's going to be very popular with the British people. | ||
He's going to be a very successful ambassador. | ||
Mr. President, I'm going to be a very successful ambassador. | ||
And? | ||
And? | ||
He's got plenty of cash. | ||
unidentified
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Are you planning to meet Ursula von der Leyen? | |
Oh, she's so fantastic, right? | ||
She's so fantastic. | ||
I hope we're going to meet. | ||
Yeah, the answer is yes. | ||
I saw her. | ||
Actually, I saw her. | ||
A few days ago. | ||
And I think that we'll definitely meet, yeah, the European Union. | ||
Big thing, they want to make a deal very badly. | ||
You know, everybody wants to make a deal. | ||
Look, everybody wants to make a deal with the United States, and we're doing that, and we're making-- we're going to make fair deals. | ||
I'm just honored that this was the first one. | ||
Go ahead, please. | ||
unidentified
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The Press: The Federal Reserve Chairman-- The Federal Reserve Chairman, Mr. President, says that you would have to call him for a meeting. | |
Do you plan to meet on with him? | ||
And what do you think about him? | ||
The President: I could call him. | ||
I'm just like talking to a wall. | ||
unidentified
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You should be-- The Press: What do you think about not cutting-- the Bank of England cut today? | |
The President: Well, the Bank of England cut. | ||
China cut. | ||
Everybody's cutting but him. | ||
It's, you know, I don't know. | ||
We'll see what happens. | ||
It's a shame. | ||
I call him Too Late, you know, Too Late Powell. | ||
That's his nickname. | ||
And it's a shame. | ||
It's ridiculous. | ||
unidentified
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So meeting, he's always too late. | |
But in this case, it's not going to matter that much because our country is so strong. | ||
We're so powerful in terms of economic strength and what we've done. | ||
And I'll tell you what, if we didn't have our first term, you wouldn't be. | ||
We created things in the first term. | ||
We cut more regulations than any president in history. | ||
We cut the taxes more than anybody in history. | ||
And a very big factor is going to be the tax bill that we have right now, the one big, beautiful bill, as we call it, which is all-encompassing the biggest tax cuts ever in history, bigger than even the first time, and the incentives. | ||
Even great for the UK, because it'll make us so strong that we're going to be doing more business with you. | ||
It's a very important element for taxes, for every aspect, regulation cuts. | ||
That bill is, I believe it's the biggest bill of its kind ever in the history of this country. | ||
And Speaker Johnson and Leader Thune have done an incredible job. | ||
I mean, I'll let you know we have to get a vote, but we have a lot of support for that bill. | ||
And if that happens, on top of all of these trade deals that we're doing, this country will hit a point that you better go out and buy stock now. | ||
Let me tell you, this country will be like a rocket ship that goes straight up. | ||
This is going to be numbers that nobody's ever seen before. | ||
That's a very important element of all of this, you know, if we get that. | ||
If you don't, and the Democrats are fighting it only because they want to fight. | ||
They have Trump derangement syndrome. | ||
You know, if it was somebody else, they wouldn't fight. | ||
If you had a normal person, if you had some stiff sitting behind you, they'd be fine. | ||
But they have Trump derangement syndrome. | ||
You know, Senator Schumer's become a Palestinian. | ||
Welcome. | ||
I don't know when they're going to give him the ceremony, whatever the ceremony may be. | ||
It's terrible what's happened to the Democrats. | ||
So, very, very important element of everything, of what we're doing, unrelated to today, but related in the sense that we'll do, if that passes, we'll do even more business with the UK. | ||
We'll have so much. | ||
It's the biggest tax cut in history. | ||
It's going to make our country zoom. | ||
It's going to be incentive, as you know, with the deduction for, basically, for work. | ||
You work, you build, you plant, etc., your deduction. | ||
It's going to be the biggest, it's the biggest bill of its kind to ever pass. | ||
Maybe the biggest bill ever passed. | ||
That's why we call it the one big beautiful. | ||
Bill. | ||
unidentified
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The Press: Mr. President, we just announced a new nominee for the U.S. Surgeon General, Never finished her residency and is not a practicing physician. | |
So can you explain why you picked her to be America's top doctor? | ||
Well, yeah, because Bobbie thought she was fantastic. | ||
She's a brilliant woman who went through Stanford. | ||
And as I understand it, she basically wanted to be an academic as opposed to a surgeon. | ||
I think she graduated first in her class at Stanford. | ||
And Bobbie really thought she was great. | ||
I don't know her. | ||
I listened to the recommendation of Bobbie. | ||
I met her. | ||
Yesterday and once before. | ||
She's a very outstanding person. | ||
A great academic, actually. | ||
unidentified
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So I think she'll be great. | |
Your nominee for U.S. Attorney of D.C. Do you have a backup plan if this Senate does not? | ||
He's a terrific person. | ||
He wasn't getting the support from people that I thought. | ||
He's done a very good job. | ||
Crime is down 25% in D.C. during his period of time. | ||
I'm very disappointed in that. | ||
But I have so many different things that I'm doing now with the trade. | ||
You know, I'm one person. | ||
I can only make, boom, I can only lift that little phone so many times in a day. | ||
But we have somebody else that will be great. | ||
I just want to say, Ed is unbelievable. | ||
And hopefully we can bring him into, whether it's DOJ or whatever, in some capacity, because really outstanding. | ||
To me, it was disappointing, I'll be honest. | ||
I have to be straight. | ||
I was disappointed. | ||
A lot of people were disappointed. | ||
But that's the way it works sometimes. | ||
That's the way it works. | ||
And he wasn't rejected, but we felt it would be hard. | ||
And we have somebody else that we'll be announcing over the next two days who's going to be great. | ||
unidentified
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With companies like Ford and Mattel recently saying they're going to raise prices on certain products, how long do you think the American public is going to be patient? | |
Well, I think they're saying that just to try and negotiate deals with me. | ||
Tariffs are the most misunderstood thing, maybe in any form of business, anywhere in business. | ||
Oftentimes, the country picks them up. | ||
Oftentimes, the company picks it up. | ||
The people don't pick it up. | ||
The people don't pick it up. | ||
And if Ford did that, they wouldn't sell any cars. | ||
Mattel, I don't know. | ||
I'm not so sure. | ||
They also said they're the only country I've heard. | ||
They said, well, we're going to go counter. | ||
We're going to try going someplace else. | ||
That's okay. | ||
Let him go, and we'll put 100% tariff on his toys, and he won't sell one toy in the United States, and that's their biggest market. | ||
I heard that. | ||
I mean, I watched this guy talking about how I'm going to go counter. | ||
I said, well, I wouldn't want to have him as an executive too long. | ||
The Ford people I know very well, what they're doing is negotiating with us by saying that. | ||
But we don't think that's going to happen. | ||
Look, I put out a truth today, and it said that gas is down, gasoline is down, energy is down, groceries are down, eggs are down. | ||
I mean, eggs, thank you very much, but eggs are down. | ||
When I came in the first week, you guys hit me with eggs. | ||
I said, what the hell happened with eggs? | ||
Eggs were up like 170 percent and going up, and they said, don't order any for Easter. | ||
And we were thinking about ordering plastic eggs like everybody was doing. | ||
And Brook did a fantastic job. | ||
Agriculture. | ||
Brook did a fantastic job. | ||
And we had hundreds of thousands of eggs out here on the lawn just two weeks ago at Easter. | ||
But you take a look at the cost. | ||
Energy's down. | ||
Even interest rates are down. | ||
Now, if the chairman of the Fed, Jerome, If he would lower interest rates like China did, like I think UK did, but like numerous other countries have done, it's like jet fuel. | ||
It would be great. | ||
But he doesn't want to do it. | ||
I think he doesn't want to do it probably. | ||
He's not in love with me. | ||
I think that's right. | ||
It's sort of a crazy reason, but that's the way life is. | ||
Anybody in his position would be like jet fuel. | ||
But even without that, we're doing well. | ||
But remember this, you know, I've watched you people reporting over the last few months that if we do this, you know, prices are going to go through. | ||
Well, groceries are down. | ||
All of this stuff is down. | ||
Lumber is down. | ||
Oil is gone down. | ||
I mean, we have that thing broke $60, right? | ||
$60 a barrel. | ||
$1.98, $1.99 in some cases. | ||
And heading... | ||
In that direction. | ||
No, I think it's been amazing, actually. | ||
You know, and what that's good for, it gives the consumer more money. | ||
And it gives them a better life. | ||
Because we just came out of the worst inflation, in my opinion, in the history of our country. | ||
They say 48 years. | ||
But Biden really screwed it up. | ||
He screwed up energy. | ||
And he also paid, he spent too much money. | ||
He was spending it on, you know, a Green News scam. | ||
And that's like throwing the money. | ||
See that beautiful window behind? | ||
Take money, throw it right out that window. | ||
Because it's the same thing. | ||
He just... | ||
unidentified
|
He spent $10 trillion. | |
He wasted it. | ||
Not only was it bad, it was a negative. | ||
It wasn't even like it helped a little bit. | ||
It was a real negative. | ||
And then on top of it, they let 21 million people into our country without any identification, anything. | ||
Just let them in. | ||
It's very sad. | ||
Well, we'll do one or two more. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
Who are you with? | ||
unidentified
|
The Press: I'm with the Daily Telegraph now. | |
You know me from another place. | ||
The Press: Yep, I do. | ||
The Press: How concerned are you about the U.K.'s reliance on China? | ||
Chinese money markets, Chinese exports-- The Press: We're not concerned. | ||
The Press: Is that something-- The Press: Honestly, I'm not concerned about anything. | ||
If I was, I wouldn't even be here right now. | ||
If I was concerned about anything-- and it wouldn't be that-- but I wouldn't be here right now. | ||
No, we're not concerned. | ||
We're going to have-- I believe a very good relationship with China and a fair relationship. | ||
And it'll get bigger and it'll grow. | ||
It'll grow. | ||
As an example, if they open up the country, that'll be the best thing China ever did for itself. | ||
They don't know that yet because, you know, it's been a different system. | ||
But that'll be the greatest thing that ever happened to China. | ||
The people will be happier. | ||
They'll buy for less. | ||
They'll see things that they never saw before and they'll be buying them. | ||
And it'll really create great long-term peace. | ||
unidentified
|
And if I could ask one of the Agriculture Secretary, actually, there's a lot of concern about chlorinated chicken and the imported hormone-treated beef. | |
Has that question been addressed, resolved in these talks, or is that something for the continuing negotiations? | ||
Well, you know, James. | ||
unidentified
|
I would just say that it's very clear, and we have in the heads of terms, that we are going to discuss all of these types of issues, and obviously... | |
The President: The importing country, whether it's us or them, you've got to follow the rules on those types of things. | ||
But our point is the rules need to make sure that they are based on science, and that's our expectation. | ||
We know the U.K. believes that, too, so we want to come to an accommodation. | ||
We want the consumers in each country to be able to choose what they want and give them the information that they want. | ||
Ms. We have an incredible EPA led by Administrator Zeldin that is on this-- so the talks continue, but we are very, very confident in our products and what the President has done to open up the markets. | ||
Is unprecedented for these farmers here in America. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Well, now it's going to really rally because, you know, don't forget, they said this is all a pipe dream. | ||
And this is a tough one. | ||
This is somebody who said, well, this is easy. | ||
This is much tougher, I think, than any other deal because they've been at it for so many years, decades, trying to make this deal. | ||
And it's very conclusive, and it's a great deal, and it's a very big deal, actually. | ||
No, this is just the beginning. | ||
We're going to be having conferences, or at some point we just put out a statement that we just signed this country, that country. | ||
And after a number of these are done, nobody has enough people to do it. | ||
We're just going to put out, X country is going to pay this, and if they open up, they're going to do this and that, and they're going to be open up. | ||
Everybody wants to be here. | ||
You know, I say this is where they want to be shopping. | ||
They want to shop in this country because we have the consumer. | ||
And we have the consumer like nobody else. | ||
And, you know, if this country went bad, the whole world would go bad. | ||
But we really saved it from going bad. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, please. | |
Can I ask you about the air traffic control issue? | ||
Are you looking at getting new software? | ||
I'm glad you asked me about it because I'm just going to be talking to now with the heads of the airlines and everything else. | ||
So I was all set before we had the rigged election. | ||
To give out a brand new gorgeous system to one company that was going to do it a whole thing, one of the best companies in the world that you know very well. | ||
You know, there are three or four of them that do it. | ||
And when they took over, Buttigieg, who has no clue, you know, he drives to work on his bicycle with his, in all fairness, with his husband on the back, which is a nice, loving relationship. | ||
But he didn't have a clue. | ||
This guy didn't have a clue. | ||
And he's actually a contender for president. | ||
Between him and Crockett, you can have that party. | ||
But he didn't have-- he didn't know what he was doing. | ||
And he took what they call dry systems, systems where you have wires in the earth, buried in the earth or whatever. | ||
And then you have the open-air systems where you have satellites. | ||
And you can't mesh them. | ||
Anybody would know that if you went through about two months of study in school, if you studied that kind of thing. | ||
And he did. | ||
They spent tens of billions of dollars trying to take old, broken equipment and merging it into existing new equipment with brand new equipment. | ||
It's one of the greatest... | ||
They spent like $40 billion. | ||
And what they did is they made it worse. | ||
Because it doesn't work together. | ||
You can't make it work together. | ||
If you have a satellite system, you need satellite. | ||
If you don't... | ||
They had all these different technologies, some of them 50 years old, and they're trying to mesh them in. | ||
And they end up spending twice the money they should have. | ||
You could have bought a whole new system. | ||
So we have a very good guy who you all know, Sean Duffy. | ||
He's head of transportation. | ||
And I've given him a 10-minute lesson in buying. | ||
And he's become really good. | ||
And we are now in the market to buy a gorgeous, brand-new system. | ||
The helicopter that crashed into the plane at 400 feet, it shouldn't have been. | ||
What would have happened is all sorts of bells and sirens would have been going off three minutes before that accident happened, if you had the right equipment. | ||
But they didn't. | ||
And the new equipment is unbelievable what it does. | ||
You can have, you don't even, well, I was going to say something, but you always, in my opinion, you always need pilots. | ||
I want pilots. | ||
But you wouldn't even have to have pilots. | ||
This system is so incredible what they can do. | ||
But we have a system that's obsolete. | ||
And what they did is the worst. | ||
They tried to combine the really old, broken stuff with the new stuff. | ||
And you can't combine it. | ||
And anybody should have known. | ||
So Biden, do you think Biden figured this out? | ||
I don't think so, fellas. | ||
Do you think he has any clue? | ||
He doesn't know what the hell's happening. | ||
So here's the story. | ||
We're going to be buying a brand new, it's going out to bid very soon, brand new state-of-the-art system that will cover the entire world. | ||
I'll give you an example. | ||
When my pilot... | ||
Now I have military pilots, but prior to that, I have very good pilots, great pilots. | ||
They would land, and I won't tell you which country, but they would use the system of another country. | ||
They wouldn't even use the system of the United States. | ||
So if I'm landing in New York or Florida or Tennessee, they're using a system from another country. | ||
I said, why is that? | ||
And they were, you know, they're not into business, but they're just saying, our system doesn't work, sir. | ||
And I said, boy, that's pretty sad. | ||
But we were all set to give it out to, you know, look, you have a Raytheon and you have different companies like that, numerous companies. | ||
And you have companies that would do it, like an IBM, as an example. | ||
And you give out one deal, one contract. | ||
They gave out hundreds of contractors. | ||
They had diggers. | ||
They had non-diggers. | ||
They had people that focused on satellites. | ||
They had hundreds of different contracts. | ||
One contract where one guy is controlling everything. | ||
You need a trench. | ||
Then they dig a trench. | ||
But if you don't dig the trench, they don't blame you. | ||
What happens is you don't dig it. | ||
Then they say, "We want a Kostov run." Now, we have it all set, and we're going to be doing it. | ||
We would have done it, except that the election took a little strange turn. | ||
But the second one didn't. | ||
That was too big to rig. | ||
Thank you very much, everybody. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you, everybody. | ||
Please continue. | ||
Thank you, everybody. | ||
Please continue. | ||
Thank you. | ||
That's from Donald Trump on what he's calling. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Good to see you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
You're going to toss to it. | ||
What a historic press conference meeting we just witnessed, just for good measure. | ||
Let's see what Jen Psaki was saying last night, and we will deliver a live on-air fact check of her brilliance. | ||
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It's been a month, if you can believe it, since Donald Trump announced his sweeping and Pretty ridiculous tariffs. | |
But Mr. Art of the Deal, as he calls himself, has not yet struck a single trade deal. | ||
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Not a single one. | |
With any single country. | ||
Well, I think Mr. Art of the Deal is delivering on his promises. | ||
Maybe I'll have to bestow you with the new title of misinformation. | ||
I'll read you some cold, hard facts that I'm sure are hitting MSNBC pretty darn hard. | ||
Billion increase in new market access, $6 billion in tariff revenue just off of this one trade deal alone. | ||
UK tariffs were originally 5.1%, dropped down now to 1.8%. | ||
US tariffs were 10%, now they are 3.4%. | ||
As you guys saw, if you watched that whole conference, the UK will reduce numerous non-tariff barriers that have unfairly discriminated against American products, billions for increased market access for American exports, especially agriculture, beef, ethanol, virtually all of these products, which are produced by our wonderful, wonderful American farmers, new market access for American machinery and chemicals, and bringing the UK into the economic security alignment with the US, ensuring a strong industrial base protections for steel, and of course, affirming reciprocity. | ||
And fairness. | ||
As I'm sure Steve would say, suck on that MSNBC and how about the Chinese Communist Party and all of the global elites that have done every single thing in their, I guess, unmatched power to try to tank President Trump's, not just the stock market, but his efforts to reorient the global economy so it works for you. | ||
Putting working class Americans first and not global elites. | ||
I guess that's bad for the MSNBC business model. | ||
Mike Lindell, I think we've got you. | ||
You've always put American workers first with everything you've got going on at MyPillow. | ||
You've got about a minute. | ||
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What a concept. | ||
I think you call it a win-win-win-win, though I think for today's trade deal we'll have to add yet another win on that. | ||
Mike Lindell, thank you for joining us. | ||
Warren Posse, thanks for hanging with me and I guess President Trump this morning. | ||
I will be back at 6 p.m. |