
Tariffs announced, tariffs delayed — tariffs denied? From the Politics Desk
In today's edition, our team looks at Trump's tariff agenda on the eve of his deadline for reimposing some of the duties he announced and then delayed in April, as well as a legal case looming over all of the tariffs. Meanwhile, Jonathan Allen outlines the thought process that awaits Kamala Harris ahead of the 2028 election.
— Scott Bland
Trump's tariffs face another inflection point, and a court test
President Donald Trump's most sweeping tariffs, the ones he originally announced in April, are set to go into effect (again) on Friday. But on Thursday, his whole tariff agenda faced a stern test in federal court, NBC News' Steve Kopack reports.
The Court of International Trade initially blocked the tariffs in late May, though they were allowed to stay in place pending appeal. The court said the law Trump cited in many of his executive orders did not 'delegate an unbounded tariff authority to the President.'
It also said the tariffs did not meet the test of interceding against an 'unusual and extraordinary' risk to the country, after Trump implemented them by claiming a national emergency.
All of Trump's tariffs on major trading partners, such as Canada, Mexico, China, the European Union, Japan, India, Brazil and a handful of other countries, have been deployed using the law.
On Thursday, an appeals court took a skeptical view of the Trump administration's argument that imposing the tariffs is well within the president's authority under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, per NBC News' Ryan Balberman. Some of the judges noted that Trump's use of the law effectively cuts Congress out of tariff policy, though the law doesn't mention tariffs.
Meanwhile, Trump extended the deadline for negotiations with Mexico before imposing new tariffs there. He's hit India, Brazil and South Korea with new tariffs as the deadline looms.
Altogether, as NBC News' Rob Wile and Steve Kopack write, since the April tariff rate announcement Trump dubbed 'Liberation Day,' the president backed down — and since then has steadily been reintroducing elevated tariffs at levels not seen since the 1930s.
What's next? We'll find out more on Friday. And more still when that appeals court makes its decision.
What Kamala Harris will weigh ahead of 2028
Analysis by Jonathan Allen
There are more than 2 million reasons for Kamala Harris not to run for president again: That's the margin she lost by in 2024.
Moreover, no Democrat has lost a general election and come back to win the presidency since Grover Cleveland in 1892. The last Democrat to win the party's nomination, lose the general election and come back to win the nomination four years later was Adlai Stevenson in 1956.
But what may ultimately be more compelling to Harris are the arguments for mounting a third bid for the Oval Office in 2028. In passing on a run for governor of California this week, she said that 'for now,' her focus is not on elective office. That left open the door to a future campaign, and there's only one job above the one the former vice president held most recently.
If Harris does hope to make a comeback, she will have to reckon with the most glaring deficiency of the 107-day campaign she ran in the shadow of President Joe Biden: She didn't articulate a clear vision for the country that met the needs of voters who were dissatisfied with his leadership. While she has time to hear voters, develop an agenda and brush up her presentation skills, she would have to devote herself to executing on those goals to win a primary and the presidency.
Still, Harris would walk into a primary race with a set of advantages over most of her rivals. For starters, and for better or worse, everyone in her party knows who she is. Most candidates have to spend exorbitant amounts of time and money to build name recognition outside their states. That's not a problem for Harris, who received more than 75 million votes in 2024.
Candidates also have to spend money on television ads and field operations, which can be prohibitively expensive. Harris would start the race with the strongest record of raising money — much of it attributable, of course, to the fact that she was the party's nominee — and the biggest list of donors. Again, she would start the race farther down the track than prospective opponents.
In her 2024 and 2020 campaigns, the latter of which actually ended in 2019 when she ran out of money and support, Harris showed she had a lot to learn about creating and communicating a message. In 2028, she would not be dealing with the scrutiny of the national media and the exhausting crunch of day-to-day campaigning for the first time. Again, these are edges she would have over first-timers.
One question she will have to answer for herself — and it's one that helped dissuade Hillary Clinton from running in 2020 — is whether she would still run if she were convinced she could win the nomination but was unlikely to defeat a Republican in November.
There's plenty of time for Harris to determine her own appetite for another campaign, the electorate's interest in her and the pure political calculation of her chances of ending up in the White House. It may be that Americans have seen the last of Harris on a ballot.
But while a Democrat last avenged a defeat in the distant past, one very present politician did it less than a year ago: Donald J. Trump.
Elon Musk gives millions to Republican super PACs ahead of the midterms
By Ben Kamisar and Bridget Bowman
Billionaire Elon Musk may be gone from President Donald Trump's White House, but he may not be done with Republican politics.
Musk made a pair of $5 million donations on June 27 to the main super PACs backing House and Senate Republicans. That made Musk the largest individual donor to both groups in the first six months of 2025, according to new campaign finance reports filed Thursday.
The new contributions are further proof of how Musk can make a big splash in politics by putting his signature on just one check. And they raise the question of how much more there might be before the midterms, despite Musk's messy post-White House breakup with Trump and his statements in July about starting a third party, made after the donations.
Musk's June 27 donations supporting the Senate Leadership Fund and the Congressional Leadership Fund, the two GOP super PACs, came about a month after leaving his official post as an adviser to Trump and days before he began publicly discussing the idea of starting a new political party.
Meanwhile, other new campaign finance reports show Musk pumped $45.3 million into his own super PAC in the first six months of this year. The tech billionaire gave nearly $17.9 million directly to the group and sent another $27.4 million in in-kind contributions, with Musk covering funds for million-dollar prizes to voters who signed petitions.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
21 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Gifford fire burns 30,000 acres in Los Padres National Forest
The Gifford fire has scorched more than 30,000 acres in less than two days in Los Padres National Forest as firefighters struggle to quell the blaze in the Sierra Madre mountains. Wildland firefighters were continuing to battle the blaze Saturday along Highway 166 in rural Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties, about 20 miles east of Santa Maria, according to the U.S. Forest Service and Cal Fire. But fire crews were faced with challenging conditions such as high temperatures, dry vegetation and rugged terrain. As of Saturday evening, the fire was 5% contained and continuing to chew through the tall, dry grass and chaparral that covers the steep hills and mountains. Evacuation orders and warnings were issued for agricultural lands near the unincorporated community of Garey. Although the fire is on federally managed land, Cal Fire crews joined the response to assist with more ground personnel and firefighting aircraft. Criticized on the social media platform X for the fire's explosive growth, Gov. Gavin Newsom's press office reiterated that the fire was not on state land. 'The #GiffordFire started on Trump's federally managed land in the Los Padres NATIONAL Forest,' read the post. 'While Trump just gutted wildfire funding, @CAL_FIRE is now stepping in to clean up what federal mismanagement helped fuel.' Newsom has criticized President Trump for cutting funding for forest management, including activities such as prescribed burning, a process that reduces the risk of explosive fires by proactively burning vegetation in a controlled environment. As of Saturday evening, a California Interagency Incident Management Team — composed of federal, state and county firefighters from various agencies, including the U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife, Bureau of Land Management, Bureau of Indian Affairs, National Park Service, Cal Fire, the state's Office of Emergency Services and county-level fire departments — was tasked with taking command of the incident. The fire was first reported about 2 p.m. Friday near Los Padres National Forest's Gifford trailhead, not far from the perimeter of the recently extinguished Madre fire. According to Cal Fire, the blaze had multiple start points along Highway 166. The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

Wall Street Journal
36 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Trump's ‘Slap in the Face' Puts Neutral Switzerland in Trade-War Crossfire
MEZZOVICO-VIRA, Switzerland—When Nicola Tettamanti looked at his phone Friday morning, his first reaction was disbelief: Overnight, President Trump had slapped Switzerland with close to the highest tariffs of any country in the world. Tettamanti is the chief executive of a 55-year-old precision toolmaking business nestled in this mountain-hugged town. He had planned in the near future to expand further into the U.S. by opening an office in Indiana.


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
What Happened When the Story of a Missing Black Trucker Went Viral - First Of All with Victor Blackwell - Podcast on CNN Podcasts
What Happened When the Story of a Missing Black Trucker Went Viral First Of All with Victor Blackwell 41 mins Black unemployment rose again in the latest jobs report. Victor breaks down the concern this raises for every racial group with writers Ernie Suggs, Michael Harriot and Jason 'Jah' Lee. The guys also weigh in on the decision by former Vice President Kamala Harris to skip a run for governor of California. Plus, the controversy over American Eagle's 'Great Jeans' ad featuring Sydney Sweeney. While schools like Columbia and Brown are cutting deals with the Trump administration, one university president targeted over "DEI" policies is not only pushing back but getting a raise. Victor discusses the probe of George Mason University's Gregory Washington with the school's faculty senate president, Solon Simmons. Did this post hit your algorithm this week? The story of an allegedly missing Black trucker started spreading on social media. Victor went down a rabbit hole looking into the story and what he discovered kept surprising him the more he kept looking. He shares what he found out about 'Eric Darnell'. Victor also speaks with a woman who says she was kicked off a flight because of her race. Dr. Briana Hicks and her attorney Lauren Bateman make their case. And in 'Art is Life' this week, artist Nick Weber takes us inside his Hamptons studio where he's painting portraits of immigrant neighbors to honor them and share their stories of perseverance.