Navarro: Fears of the tariff of media leadership
White House trading advisers, Peter Navarro, criticized the media during a recent interview with him, on the pretext that the media uses “intimidation tactics” to create more fear among the public as President Trump enacted his commercial agenda.
“Well, it is usually a deal, as the media loves to remind us, takes a long time – 18 months. But we will do this at Trump’s time, and this means that the normal time.”
“You will see, and I have mentioned that the American public has a short memory, all the misery that the media raises on it now, with all the tactics of fear, it will disappear with the arrival of the first deal,” said host Liland Vitt.
Navarro expects that the first commercial deals that the United States can strike are the United Kingdom, India or South Korea. After being taken care of, the audience will witness the effectiveness of Trump’s approach to trade.
“Once we start with what will be a sea, a march of deals, people will start understanding that the strategy adopted by Trump is completely correct that the world needs to stop our tension,” said commercial advisor.
The last import tax Trump ignited the war of tariffs with foreign commercial partners and opponents. While there are concerns among Americans across the country about the impact of definitions on the American economy, Navaro claimed on Tuesday that consumer anxiety would disappear as soon as the first commercial deals are placed in the stone.
“We have almost every nation in the world coming to us to negotiate less fraud,” he said. “It is a beautiful thing in the world to see it.”
Trump, in an interview on Tuesday with Terry Moran from ABC News, denied that the United States is heading to difficult times in the wake of its definition, arguing that “everyone will be fine.”
“It wasn’t that if I didn’t do it. I had a choice. I could leave it, and have a nice and easy time. But I think you will not do it in the end [have] Trump told the news director.
“Our country was worse than before.” “You don’t remember that. Why don’t you remember that?”