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| | | | First Thing: Markets plunge as IMF says Trump trade war poses ‘significant risk’ to global economy | | London’s stock market opened at its lowest level since January, while France suggests pause on investing in the US. Plus, what now for TikTok? | | | The floor of the New York Stock Exchange last night. Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP | | Clea Skopeliti | | Good morning. Donald Trump’s barrage of tariff announcements has wiped trillions of dollars off the value of the world’s largest companies and supercharged recession fears, with London’s stock market opening on Friday morning at its lowest level since January. Wednesday’s dramatic import tax announcements of between 10% and 50% are causing alarm around the world, with China condemning “unilateral bullying” practices and the French president, Emmanuel Macron, suggesting a pause on investing in the US. The International Monetary Fund has warned that Trump’s move poses a “significant risk” to the global economy. Sell-offs have gone global, sending exchanges plunging in Asia and Europe. On Thursday the three main US stock markets experienced their worst day since June 2020, during the Covid pandemic. What has the political reaction been? There are some signs of a slight Republican backlash, with the former Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell calling tariffs “bad policy” that hurt ordinary Americans. McConnell and three other Republican senators backed a Democrat resolution demanding that the 25% tariffs on Canadian products be reversed. Get the latest from our business blog and our US politics blog. Democrats decry reported firing of NSA director Tim Haugh | | | | The National Security Agency director, Tim Haugh, at a Senate committee hearing in March. Photograph: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images | | | Top congressional Democrats on Thursday denounced the reported dismissal of the National Security Agency director Gen Tim Haugh, with one lawmaker saying it “makes all of us less safe”. The Washington Post reported late on Thursday that Haugh, who also coordinated the Pentagon’s cybersecurity operations as head of US Cyber Command, had been dismissed. His civilian deputy at the NSA, Wendy Noble, was also fired. Mark Warner, vice-chair of the Senate intelligence committee, asked: “At a time when the United States is facing unprecedented cyber threats … how does firing him make Americans any safer?” Representative Jim Himes, the ranking member on the house intelligence committee, said he was “deeply disturbed by the decision”, adding that he feared Haugh may have been fired because he “followed the law and put national security first”. Were others fired? Yes – Trump said earlier on Thursday that he had fired “some” White House national security council officials. The announcement came a day after the far-right activist Laura Loomer raised concerns with him about staff loyalty. TikTok ban deadline once again approaches – what now? | | | | The new deadline for the TikTok ban is 5 April. Photograph: Allison Dinner/EPA | | | The deadline for TikTok to divest or sell its assets to a non-Chinese owner is again looming, on 5 April, with the future unclear for the app that is used by 170 million Americans. The ban-or-divest deadline was pushed back in January by an executive order by president Donald Trump, who earlier this week said he would “like to see TikTok remain alive”. A handful of investors have said they are interested in the app, but ByteDance, the Chinese company that owns TikTok, has said it does not plan to sell. In court filings it said that divestiture “is simply not possible: not commercially, not technologically, not legally”. Where did the TikTok ban come from? It started with Trump, who in 2020 said the Chinese-owned app posed a danger to national security. It then became a bipartisan issue, with Congress voting for a ban last year – but Trump has since made an about-face on the issue. In other news … | | | | People react to the ruling on the impeachment against President Yoon Suk Yeol by South Korea’s constitutional court in Seoul. Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/Shutterstock | | | South Korea’s constitutional court voted unanimously to uphold the impeachment of the country’s suspended president, Yoon Suk Yeol, after he declared martial law in December. Trump has reportedly threatened to freeze $510m in grants to Brown University in Rhode Island as the administration cracks down on academic institutions in the wake of last autumn’s Palestinian solidarity protests. Israel has bombed a school-turned-shelter in Gaza City and killed at least 27 people, rescuers said, as Israel wages a new campaign to “divide up” the territory. Stat of the day: Fewer than one in four girls feel safe at school in England | | | | An international study found girls in English schools felt much less safe since the pandemic. Photograph: Ben Birchall/PA | | | Teenage girls in England say they feel less safe at school since the pandemic, research has found, while a smaller decline has been observed in boys of the same age. In 2019, 43% of girls aged 13-14 in England strongly agreed that they were safe at school, but in the latest survey, carried out in 2023, that halved to 21%. For boys in England over the same period the percentage fell from 41% to 31%. Don’t miss this: Wet Leg on overnight success, sexual epiphanies and facing fears | | | | Wet Leg’s Rhian Teasdale (left) and Hester Chambers. Photograph: Alice Backham | | | Ahead of the release of their second album this summer, Wet Leg open up about falling in love, feeling homesick, queer identity … and the weirdest jobs they’ve worked. “I was a character at a theme park,” Rhian Teasdale reveals, somewhat reluctantly. “I was this thing called a Squawk Bird, a puppet you have to get inside. You have to make all the sounds.” Climate check: At least seven killed after severe storms and tornadoes hit US south and midwest | | | | Recovery workers survey storm damage to a warehouse in Brownsburg, Indiana, on Thursday. Photograph: Michael Conroy/AP | | | Severe storms and tornadoes have killed at least seven people in Tennessee and Missouri, with further fatalities expected to be confirmed. Indiana has declared a state of emergency over the severe weather, while warnings were issued in parts of Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri and Mississippi. The storms are now heading eastward, after leaving more than 213,000 households without power from Texas to Ohio. The climate crisis is intensifying the severity of tornadoes, scientists have said. Last Thing: ‘People scream in shock’: California woman with the world’s longest tongue | | | | Chanel Tapper has earned the Guinness world record title for the world’s longest tongue. Photograph: Guinness world records | | | Whatever your best party trick is, Chanel Tapper and her 3.8in (9.75cm) tongue probably have you beat. She can flip a red cup with it. Remove Jenga blocks from a stack. Use it to pick up a spoon. But she still has the most fun just showing it to people and watching their reactions. “People yell or scream in shock, or horror sometimes, [and] that’s probably my favorite because it’s funny to me because it’s a dramatic response,” the 34-year-old Californian said. Sign up | | | | | First Thing is delivered to thousands of inboxes every weekday. 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| Betsy Reed | Editor, Guardian US |
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| I hope you appreciated this newsletter. Before you move on, I wanted to ask whether you could support the Guardian’s journalism as we face the unprecedented challenges of covering the second Trump administration. As Trump himself observed: “The first term, everybody was fighting me. In this term, everybody wants to be my friend.” He’s not entirely wrong. All around us, media organizations have begun to capitulate. First, two news outlets pulled election endorsements at the behest of their billionaire owners. Next, prominent reporters bent the knee at Mar-a-Lago. And then a major network – ABC News – rolled over in response to Trump’s legal challenges and agreed to a $16m million settlement in his favor. The Guardian is clear: we have no interest in being Donald Trump’s – or any politician’s – friend. Our allegiance as independent journalists is not to those in power but to the public. How are we able to stand firm in the face of intimidation and threats? As journalists say: follow the money. The Guardian has neither a self-interested billionaire owner nor profit-seeking corporate henchmen pressuring us to appease the rich and powerful. We are funded by our readers and owned by the Scott Trust – whose only financial obligation is to preserve our journalistic mission in perpetuity. With the new administration boasting about its desire to punish journalists, and Trump and his allies already pursuing lawsuits against newspapers whose stories they don’t like, it has never been more urgent, or more perilous, to pursue fair, accurate reporting. Can you support the Guardian today? We value whatever you can spare, but a recurring contribution makes the most impact, enabling greater investment in our most crucial, fearless journalism. As our thanks to you, we can offer you some great benefits. We’ve made it very quick to set up, so we hope you’ll consider it. | However you choose to support us: thank you for helping protect the free press. Whatever happens in the coming months and years, you can rely on the Guardian never to bow down to power, nor back down from truth. | Support us |
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