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NIGEL FARAGE SPEAKING IN WALES U.K AFTER TRUMPS IN THE U.S
Note: u.k anons will be interested and please to hear the woke is dead. nigel wants to help in the national interest while labour is in power but is also is the leader of the reform party. the speaker of the house lindsey house has invited donald trump to speak in the house next year to both parties. Good news is on the horizon.
runtime 32 minutes. worth watching.
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LIVE: Nigel Farage speaks after Donald Trump win
https://youtu.be/JZCMDsoUcfo
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Reform UK hold a Welsh conference at the Celtic Manor hotel in Newport.
Donald Trump wants to make a quick start on cutting taxes and protecting US business from foreign competition in his first 100 days as part of his long-held ambition to reverse the era of globalisation that has shaped the modern world.
The president-elect, who appointed his campaign mastermind as chief of staff on Thursday night, has tasked advisers with drawing up plans to push through the rapid renewal of his far-reaching 2017 tax cuts. There will be extra measures to reward companies that move their overseas supply chains back to the US.
This could be combined with tariffs on almost all players in the $3 trillion US import market, which Trump believes will spur massive relocation into America and the creation of thousands of US-based jobs.
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FULL REPORT
Trump’s first 100 days: tax cuts, tariffs and a new world order
President-elect confirms he will prioritise mass deportation as Joe Biden speaks for the first time since Tuesday’s US electio
https://www.thetimes.com/world/us-world/article/trump-tax-cut-tariffs-dvvzkf79x
-—-
FULL REPORT
Trump’s first 100 days: tax cuts, tariffs and a new world order
President-elect confirms he will prioritise mass deportation as Joe Biden speaks for the first time since Tuesday’s US electio
https://www.thetimes.com/world/us-world/article/trump-tax-cut-tariffs-dvvzkf79x
https://www.thetimes.com/world/us-world/article/trump-tax-cut-tariffs-dvvzkf79x
https://archive.ph/GFCzr
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Donald Trump wants to make a quick start on cutting taxes and protecting US business from foreign competition in his first 100 days as part of his long-held ambition to reverse the era of globalisation that has shaped the modern world.
The president-elect, who appointed his campaign mastermind as chief of staff on Thursday night, has tasked advisers with drawing up plans to push through the rapid renewal of his far-reaching 2017 tax cuts. There will be extra measures to reward companies that move their overseas supply chains back to the US.
This could be combined with tariffs on almost all players in the $3 trillion US import market, which Trump believes will spur massive relocation into America and the creation of thousands of US-based jobs.
• Trump policies: What will he do in office?
The goal is grandiose even by the 78-year-old president-elect’s bombastic standards — nothing short of a reordering of the global economic order. It already has America’s trading partners across Europe and Asia frantically drawing up contingency plans on how to respond.
Andrew Bailey, whose Bank of England cut interest rates by 0.25 percentage points on Thursday, said: “The world economy sort-of breaking up is not a good thing. Tariffs is one of the things that can cause that sort of fracturing of the world economy.”
Bailey called for cool heads to prevail while Trump’s campaign rhetoric met the cold reality of governing. “Let’s wait and see where things get to. I’m not going to prejudge what might happen, what might not happen, where policy goes to,” he said. “I’m sure there will be a very open dialogue between us and the US administration.”
Trump has repeatedly complained about US manufacturing being outsourced to countries with cheaper labour markets. A large chunk of his support base comes from working-class voters in post-industrial areas ravaged by globalisation.
He is gambling that his tax cuts and tariffs pay off despite almost universal pushback from economists. The nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget projects that his tax cuts could add $9.15 trillion to the US debt over the next decade. It is already nearly $36 trillion. The cost of tariffs has been described as incalculable because of the unpredictable impact on world markets.
continued
A conservative lobbyist familiar with the tax discussions told The Washington Post that the attitude was to “just go” with Trump’s plans, amid a desire not to get bogged down. The approach, he said, was to “rip the Band-Aid and run and just plough it through”.
Another of Trump’s key ambitions for a second term is the deportation of millions of undocumented immigrants. In his first interview since winning the election, Trump confirmed this would be one of his first priorities.
“It’s not a question of a price tag. It’s not — really, we have no choice,” he told NBC News on Thursday. “When people have killed and murdered, when drug lords have destroyed countries, and now they’re going to go back to those countries because they’re not staying here. There is no price tag.”
Trump has pledged to deport as many as 20 million migrants by invoking the Alien Enemies Act, which dates from 1798. His dragnet approach, which is favoured by a majority of Americans, would cost $315 billion and shrink the US economy by at least 4.2 per cent, according to a report by the American Immigration Council (AIC), a nonpartisan Washington think tank.
Trump’s ability to push his ambitious programme through Congress, which holds the purse strings, received a boost when a Republican challenger was called the winner of a Democratic-held Senate seat in Pennsylvania. This gives the Republicans 53 seats in the 100-member chamber, with two close races yet to be decided. Counting was continuing in 27 remaining seats in the House of Representatives, with Republicans needing eight of them to retain their majority.
• See the results of each election with our tracker
Gavin Newsom, the Democratic governor of California, said he had called a special session of the state legislature to protect its liberal policies in anticipation of big changes to federal law under Trump.
He said additional resources were necessary to “safeguard California values and fundamental rights” on immigration, climate change and reproductive rights, adding: “The freedoms we hold dear in California are under attack — and we won’t sit idle.”
Newsom, 57, who has clashed repeatedly with Trump, has made no secret of his ambitions for higher office.
The details surrounding the plans for Trump’s first 100 days emerged as President Biden used his first public address since Trump’s victory to declare the “struggle for the soul of America” would continue but that there would be a peaceful transfer of power.
Speaking in the White House rose garden, Biden called for unity after Tuesday’s fractious contest. “You can’t love your country only when you win,” he said. “You can’t love your neighbour only when you agree.”
Biden’s message to his own Democratic Party was that Kamala Harris, his vice-president, may have lost the election, but “America is calling for you to get back up”.
Some in his party fear the outbreak of an internecine war over the result, with much of the ire being focused on the president himself. They argue that the party needs a wholesale recalibration.
“This is a historic disaster of biblical proportions,” the strategist Chris Kofinis told The Wall Street Journal. “The Democratic Party, as it is, is dead. This is a historic realignment. There were Reagan Democrats. Now there are Trump Democrats.
“The elites of this country alienated voters everywhere because they didn’t want to hear what working- and middle-class voters were screaming for four years — focus on us and our problems, not your agenda to destroy Trump.”
Trump’s transition team is headed by his friend Linda McMahon, chairwoman of the conservative America First Policy Institute and a former chief executive of World Wrestling Entertainment, and Howard Lutnick, chief executive of the financial services group Cantor Fitzgerald.
McMahon and Lutnick have drawn up shortlists for key posts throughout the cabinet and the White House, and on Thursday night it was announced that Susie Wiles, his campaign manager, would be his chief of staff. Lutnick is himself in the running to be Trump’s Treasury secretary.
Meanwhile, President Putin of Russia sent his congratulations to the president-elect in his first comments since the election.“What has been said [by Trump] about a desire to restore relations with Russia and to help end the Ukrainian crisis deserves attention, at the very least,” Putin said at a forum in Sochi, the Black Sea city.
He added that Trump had behaved “courageously” and “like a man” in the aftermath of the attempt on his life in Pennsylvania in July.
Trump told NBC he had spoken to “probably” 70 world leaders since Wednesday morning, including “a very good talk” with Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister. He said he spoke with President Zelensky of Ukraine but did not give details. Trump, who has also spoken to Sir Keir Starmer, added he had not yet spoken with Putin but added: “I think we’ll speak”.
end
>>21949014, >>21949033, >>21949034 NIGEL FARAGE SPEAKING IN WALES U.K AFTER TRUMPS IN THE U.S AND TIMES ARTICLE - source, youtube vid and article from the times bun.
notable