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Trump: US Has Not Yet Agreed to Rollback of China Tariffs

Trump Won’t Endorse Jeff Sessions for Now

President Donald Trump said he would not endorse Jeff Sessions, his one-time attorney general, for now. Sessions announced late Thursday that he’s running for the Senate seat he left to become attorney general in 2017. “Well I haven’t gotten involved. I saw he said very nice things about me last night, but we’ll have to see. I’ll have to see. I haven’t made a determination,” Trump told reporters as he departed the White House on Friday. Asked later if he would “campaign against Jeff Sessions,” Trump said no. “No, I won’t. I’ll see how it all goes. You have some very good candidates. Look, Alabama is a place where my approval numbers are very good, I think I won by 42 points. I love Alabama,” Trump said, noting he is…

U.S. President Donald Trump talks to reporters before boarding Marine One and departing the White House in Washington, on Nov. 08, 2019. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump said on Nov. 8 that he has not agreed to a complete cancellation of tariffs on Chinese goods, bringing uncertainty to the ongoing trade deal negotiations between the world’s two largest economies.

A day prior, officials from both countries indicated that there was an agreement to roll back the tariffs on each other’s goods, if they can reach a phase one trade deal that would resolve long-standing issues on U.S. agricultural purchases and intellectual property protection.

When asked by reporters about the potential of cancelling taxes on Chinese goods on Nov. 8, Trump said that he has not agreed to reduce the tariffs currently in place.

“China would like to get somewhat of a rollback, not a complete rollback, [be]cause they know I won’t do it,” Trump said. “I haven’t agreed to anything.”

He added that China is more eager to reach a trade deal, and that the U.S. tariffs were bringing in financial benefits for the country.

“I’m very happy right now. We’re taking in billions of dollars,” he said.

He indicated that the signing of a future pact would likely take place in the United States if the two sides can seal the deal.

“Assuming we’d get it… it could be Iowa or farm country or some place like that. It will be in our country,” he said.

On Thursday, Chinese Ministry of Commerce spokesperson Gao Feng stressed that tariff cancellations would be a key step to reaching an agreement.

“The trade war started with tariffs and should end with cancelling the tariffs,” Gao said at a press conference. He said that the specific details are negotiable, but the proportion of tariff cancelations on both sides should be the same.

That same day, anonymous U.S. officials also told media, including Reuters, that phasing out tariffs would be part of the interim trade agreement.

S&P 500 and Dow Jones indices both dropped on Friday after Trump’s comments cast doubt on the plan. Share prices in seven of 11 major S&P sectors fell, while sensitive sectors in Dow such as 3M Co. and Boeing Co. also suffered losses.

The dollar rose by 0.2 percent on Friday afternoon, hitting a three-week high.

China made several olive branch gestures on Thursday to ease trade tensions.

China’s State Council announced that it would lift limits on foreign investments in China, including for foreign banks and insurance firms, in a pledge to “create a more open, transparent, and predictable” business environment. The list of guidelines also highlighted the importance of stepping up intellectual property protection.

Chinese theft of U.S. trade secrets has remained a sticking point in U.S. negotiations during the past 16 months of the trade war. On Nov. 6, U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) and Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), who chair the Senate Armed Services Committee and Senate Commerce Committee respectively, wrote to Trump urging him to hold Chinese technology firms accountable for unethical trade practices.

“If Chinese companies are allowed to remove the profit incentive for standards-based wireless research without repercussions, we will soon globally face the undesirable reality that the only companies conducting this research will be those in non-market economies that do not share our values or have our best interest in mind,” they said in the letter.

China’s customs administration as well as agricultural ministry officials were also considering to remove restrictions on U.S. poultry imports, Chinese state-run media Xinhua reported on Thursday. China banned all U.S. poultry and eggs in January 2015 due to a bird flu outbreak.

The Chinese government also sentenced nine fentanyl traffickers on Thursday in cooperation with U.S. investigators, in an effort to curb illegal exports of the deadly drug to the United States.

China is the world’s largest manufacturer of fentanyl. Washington has blamed Beijing for failing to curb the supply of synthetic drugs into the country—as promised during trade negotiations between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and Trump during the Dec. 2018 G-20 summit.

China’s foreign ministry spokesperson declined to give additional trade updates during a press conference on Friday.

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Mulvaney Doesn’t Comply With House Impeachment Probe: Reports

Acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney refused to comply with the closed-door subpoena amid a House impeachment inquiry, according to an official who is working on the inquiry, reported The Associated Press and other news outlets on Friday. The official, who was anonymous, told reporters from several news outlets that “one minute before his scheduled deposition was to start, Mr. Mulvaney’s outside counsel informed us that his client had been directed by the White House not to comply with the duly authorized subpoena and asserted ‘absolute immunity.” On Tuesday, the three Democrat-led House committees overseeing the probe sent a letter to Mulvaney asking him to appear for a closed-door deposition on Friday. “Based on evidence gathered in the impeachment inquiry and public reporting, we believe that you possess…