Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Senate passes bill to nullify Trump’s sweeping global tariffs on more than 100 nations – as it happened

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Summary

Here’s a wrap-up of the day’s key events:

  • Transportation secretary Sean Duffy warned of the impacts of the shutdown on the aviation industry and blamed Democrats for the closures. If the shutdown drags into the Thanksgiving holiday season, Duffy warned of “mass issues” with air travel. “It’ll be a disaster in aviation,” he said, adding: “October is a slower air travel month, and we have great weather in October, and so you’ve seen minimal disruption because of good weather and slower travel.”

  • For a third time this week, a bipartisan group of senators rallied to nullify the global “reciprocal” tariffs imposed by the Donald Trump on more than 100 US trading partners. The 51-47 tally came just hours after Trump emerged from crucial trade talks with the Chinese leader Xi Jinping, a meeting the US president described as “amazing” and “truly great”. Trump said Chinese imports would now be subject to a 47% tariff, down 10 percentage points.

  • The Trump administration announced plans to restrict the number of refugees it admits into the United States next year to the level of just 7,500 – and those spots will mostly be filled by white South Africans. The low number represents a dramatic drop after the US previously allowed in hundreds of thousands of people fleeing war and persecution from around the world.

  • New York’s governor, Kathy Hochul, has declared a state of emergency to raise $65m to help food banks as federal funding for the national food stamps program is set to expire on Saturday due to the government shutdown. The move comes after Oregon and Virginia also declared emergencies to make funds available to cover the anticipated short fall in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Snap), which provides food aid to nearly 42 million people.

  • US Treasury secretary Scott Bessent on Thursday said that the US would enact a one-year suspension of Entity List restrictions that make it harder for Chinese firms to use affiliates to buy off-limits technology. The moratorium comes after President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping were able to discuss big picture issues with great respect at their meeting earlier in the day in South Korea, Bessent said in an interview on Fox Business Network.

Key events

Rachel Leingang

Rachel Leingang

Extremists are exploiting political violence on online platforms to recruit new people to their causes and amplify the use of violence for political goals, according to a new report that monitored social platforms after recent attacks.

Researchers at New York University’s Stern Center for Business and Human Rights tracked social media feeds for several months this year, including in the aftermath of Charlie Kirk’s assassination.

“Violent extremist groups systematically exploit trigger events – high-profile incidents of violence – to recruit supporters, justify their ideologies and call for retaliatory action,” the findings say.

The US is experiencing an increase in political violence and extremism, with high-profile incidents targeting Democratic lawmakers in Minnesota, Kirk, an ICE facility, a church, a Jewish museum and more. Donald Trump and his allies have falsely claimed the violence is coming solely from the “radical left” and sought to clamp down on left-leaning groups. Republican members of Congress took testimony in a House subcommittee this week about rising political violence.

For the full story, click here:


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