Good morning. Donald Trump says tariffs on Canada and Mexico—plus a bigger duty on China—will hit next week. OpenAI drops its newest tool. And Blue Origin is launching a star-studded, all-female crew into space.
U.S. President Donald Trump's recent comments during his first cabinet meeting on Wednesday have created confusion regarding tariffs on goods from Canada and Mexico, while also considering a 25% duty generally on European Union goods.
Mexico sends 29 cartel figures to the United States as a gesture to US President Donald Trump amid tariff threats.
Canada and Mexico are trying to get the United States not to follow through on a promise by President Trump to impose tariffs of 25% on imported goods.
The White House has kept the wire service from covering key events because it refuses to call the body of water between Mexico and Florida the Gulf of America, as renamed by Trump.
U.S. President Donald Trump's new policies concerning unauthorized immigrants and mass deportation operations have caught some Latin American countries off guard, prompting them to improvise ways to deal with the unexpected arrival of high numbers of those being deported.
Donald Trump weighed in directly for the first time on his efforts to freeze out the Associated Press from White House events because the news service declined to rename the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America.
The review could set the stage for Defense Secretary Hegseth to follow through with goals to invest more in the Asia-Pacific and prioritize securing the U.S. border with Mexico, along with other reforms.
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TAG24 NEWS on MSNMexico agrees to Trump administration demand over drug traffickingMexico has extradited 29 alleged drug traffickers to the US as it faces mounting pressure from US President Donald Trump to tackle drug smuggling.
1hon MSN
All the 29 drug cartel figures sent to the US on Thursday were brought from prisons across Mexico to board planes at an airport north of Mexico City that took them to eight US cities.
11hon MSN
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico has sent drug lord Rafael Caro Quintero, who was behind the killing of a U.S. DEA agent in 1985, to the United States with 28 other prisoners requested by the U.S. government, the Mexican government said in a statement Thursday.
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