James Woolcock
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Now, Bloomberg has learned the White House is working on tweaks to its trade agenda.
Ways to make the steel and aluminium tariffs more targeted and potentially roll back some levies.
Countries including the UK, Mexico and Canada, as well as EU members, could stand to benefit from any easing.
In London, James Woolcock, Bloomberg Radio.
Republicans are growing anxious.
Earlier this week, the House of Representatives passed a bill directly targeting the President's tariffs on Canadian imports.
It's this growing nervousness about the cost of living and upcoming midterms that are the background to the FT's story.
The paper cites three unnamed sources saying White House trade officials were worried tariffs were hurting consumers by hitting the prices of food and drinks cans.
Countries including the UK, Mexico and Canada, as well as EU members, could stand to benefit from any easing.
In London, James Woolcock, Bloomberg Radio.
Among the elite businessmen who carried on friendly, crude and sometimes disturbing correspondence with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, few kept up their exchanges as long as Sultan Ahmed bin Sulaim.
Emails show the men exchanged contacts in business and politics, attempted to broker deals for one another and made explicit references to sexual encounters.
Now, in the wake of those emails being made public, both the UK's development finance bank, British International Investment,
and Canadian pension fund Caisse de Depot et Placement du QuΓ©bec have halted their investments with Sulaim's firm DP World.
Bloomberg investigated the emails last summer, and Sulaim has not responded to repeated requests for comment since then.
In London, James Woolcock, Bloomberg Radio.
Good morning, Nathan, Karen.
We learned yesterday the Labour Party is deeply unhappy.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer lost two of his top aides in less than 24 hours.
And we are reporting this morning that a third, the most senior civil servant in the country, Chris Wormald, may also be nearing the exit.