NewKerala.com Logo

Ball is in China's court: WH Press Secretary Leavitt on tariff war

ANI April 16, 2025 227 views

The White House is applying significant pressure on China to engage in trade negotiations, with Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt delivering a clear message about US economic positioning. Trump's administration claims to have multiple trade deals in progress and is specifically targeting China's economic relationship with the United States. The press briefing highlighted the administration's confidence in its negotiating strategy, emphasizing that the US holds the strategic advantage. Leavitt's statements suggest an ongoing complex diplomatic and economic chess match between the two global powers.

"The ball is in China's court. China needs to make a deal with us." - Karoline Leavitt, White House Press Secretary"
Washington DC, April 16: White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt responded to questions on China during the White House Press Briefing on Tuesday (US Local time) and shared with members of media, Donald Trump's additional statement on China.

Key Points

1

Trump administration maintains tough stance on China trade negotiations

2

15+ trade deals currently under active consideration

3

US seeks strategic economic leverage with China

Answering a question about extension on the TikTok ban to June 19, if China doesn't come to the table, Leavitt said that two months is a long time.

She said that she doesn't want to get ahead. The Vice President continues to lead these negotiations and talks. The President is involved, and they are ongoing."

When asked if Trump would reduce tariffs on China in order to get the TikTok deal done, Leavitt said that Trump's position on China is "quite clear."

In her remarks, Leavitt said, "The President has made his position on China quite clear, although I do have an additional statement that he just shared with me in the Oval Office. The ball is in China's court. China needs to make a deal with us. We don't have to make a deal with them."

She elaborated, "There's no difference between China and any other country, except they are much larger. And China wants what we have, what every country wants, what we have -- the American consumer, or to put it another way, they need our money."

She further added, "So the President again has made it quite clear that he's open to a deal with China, but China needs to make a deal with the United States of America."

Responding to a question on tariffs as to which deals are in hand, Leavitt praised the work being done by the American officials such as the US Trade Ambassador, Secretary of Commerce, and Secretary of Treasury, "who are working incredibly hard to cut these good trade deals."

She added, "The President is deeply involved in this (trade deal) and he has made it clear to his trade team that he wants to personally sign off on all these deals too."

Leavitt further noted, "You've obviously heard from numerous administration officials that there have been many talks with countries. We've had more than 15 deals, pieces of paper put on the table, proposals that are actively being considered, and as we have said consistently, more than 75 countries have reached out, so there is a lot of work to do."

Leavitt also said, "We do believe that we can announce some deals very soon."

Trump had enacted a 90-day pause on "reciprocal" tariffs that briefly took effect last week, impacting dozens of nations, as reported by CNN.

Citing administrative officials, CNN also noted that the pause was put in place to buy more time to work on nailing down more trade deals.

As reported by CNN, the pause, however, did not impact China, whose products are subject to a minimum 145 per cent, with the exception of certain electronics.

CNN noted that on Friday, China also significantly ramped up its own duties on US imports into the country.

Reader Comments

M
Marcus T.
Finally some strong leadership on China! They've been taking advantage of us for decades. The tariffs should have been higher from the start. πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ
S
Sarah L.
I appreciate the tough stance, but I worry this could hurt American consumers with higher prices. There's got to be a better way to handle this without tariff wars.
J
Jamal K.
The TikTok extension is interesting. Gives both sides time to negotiate but also keeps the pressure on. Smart move.
A
Amanda P.
"China needs our money" - that's the most honest statement I've heard from the White House in years! πŸ˜‚ But seriously, they do depend on our market.
R
Robert H.
While I support being tough on China, the language here seems unnecessarily antagonistic. We need cooperation on global issues too - climate change doesn't care about tariffs.
T
Tina M.
15 deals on the table sounds promising! Hope we see some concrete results soon. The trade imbalance with China has been out of control for too long.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Your email won't be published

Disclaimer: Comments are the opinions of users and not of this website or it's staff. News stories are provided by news agencies. We do not guarantee their accuracy. Inappropriate content may be removed. By posting, you agree to our terms.

You May Like!