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Trump Prepares to Step Up His Trade War

Happy Monday! After a busy weekend of games—including Auburn’s memorable victory over Michigan State to advance to the Final Four—Chestbrockwell1967 and J. Fuqua are tied for first place in the TMD pool, followed by RedRaiderDad51, travbradburn, and romann233. We wish we had thought to pick the four No. 1 seeds to advance!

Our Dispawtch bracket has also entered its own Final Four. Who will take home the inaugural championship: Tesi, Meeko, Gus, or Molly? Cast your vote for today!

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • More than 1,700 people have died as a result of a 7.7 magnitude earthquake in Burma on Friday, the country’s ruling junta said Sunday. In Thailand, where the strong tremors caused the collapse of high-rise buildings, at least 18 people have died. The death tolls are expected to rise significantly as rescue teams continue to search the rubble in both countries. International aid groups arrived in Burma over the weekend in an effort to stave off a humanitarian crisis in the impoverished Southeast Asian nation, which in recent years has reeled from an ongoing civil war following the 2021 military coup. On Saturday, Burma’s main armed opposition group declared a two-week ceasefire in an effort to ensure aid shipments to areas of the country under its control.
  • Hundreds of thousands of protesters gathered in cities across Turkey on Saturday night to call for the release of jailed opposition leader Ekrem İmamoğlu, the chief political rival of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. The ousted Istanbul mayor was arrested pending a trial on corruption charges earlier this month, days before being named the presidential nominee of the country’s Republican People’s Party last week. Turkish authorities have detained nearly 2,000 people—including several journalists—in the ongoing demonstrations, which began following İmamoğlu’s initial arrest nearly two weeks ago. Police have also used pepper spray, water cannons, and tear gas in an effort to disperse the mass protests, while Erdoğan denounced the pro-democracy rallies as “street terrorism.” 
  • The Israeli military carried out airstrikes on Hezbollah targets in southern Beirut on Friday, the country’s first attack on the Lebanese capital since November. The operation came in response to Friday rocket fire on the northern Israeli city of Kiryat Shmona, one of the communities whose residents have begun to return home after being evacuated for more than a year. The Israeli airstrikes also targeted the Iranian-backed terrorist group’s command centers, rocket launchers, and fighters in multiple locations across southern Lebanon. The resumption of cross-border attacks risks upending a November ceasefire agreement between Israel and Lebanon.
  • The Taliban on Thursday released Faye Hall, an American woman who had been held in Afghanistan since February. Hall, who was arrested on charges of using a drone without authorization, is the fourth American to be freed from Afghanistan since January. The Taliban released George Glezmann, a Delta Air Lines mechanic, earlier this month after more than two years. On Wednesday, the U.S. lifted millions of dollars of bounties on three leaders of the Taliban’s Haqqani network, a U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organization.
  • Vice President J.D. Vance visited Greenland on Friday amid President Donald Trump’s push to annex the Danish territory. Vance focused on security and economic development during the trip, promising to “respect [the] sovereignty” of the Arctic island should it pursue independence from Denmark. However, Trump appeared to contradict the vice president a day later, telling NBC News that the U.S. would “get Greenland.” Meanwhile, on Sunday, Greenland Prime Minister Jens Frederik Nielsen rejected the American president’s remarks: “Let me make this clear: The U.S. is not getting that. We don’t belong to anyone else. We decide our own future.”
  • Someone set fire to the entryway of the Republican Party headquarters in Albuquerque, New Mexico, on Sunday in what authorities believe was a deliberate act of arson. In addition to the fire, the words “ICE = KKK” were spray-painted on the building. “This horrific attack, fueled by hatred and intolerance, is a direct assault on our values, freedoms, and our right to political expression,” the New Mexico GOP said in a statement. The fire followed a series of recent arson incidents targeting Tesla vehicles from Kansas City, Missouri, to Toulouse, France.
  • President Trump announced Friday that Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom—a prominent New York-based law firm—had agreed to provide more than $100 million in pro bono legal services in support of several Trump administration initiatives. The move, which Trump described as “essentially a settlement,” allowed Skadden to sidestep the president’s campaign of executive orders targeting five other top law firms so far. Also on Friday, two federal judges issued temporary restraining orders halting the implementation of parts of Trump’s orders singling out the firms Jenner & Block and WilmerHale. Earlier this month, a federal judge temporarily barred Trump from executing parts of a separate order targeting the Perkins Coie law firm.
  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth sent a memo to members of the department’s leadership on Friday giving them until April 11 to submit proposals to “realign” the size of the Pentagon’s civilian workforce. Hegseth said the move, which reopened the deferred resignation program and offered early retirements to all “eligible personnel,” aims to “reduce duplicative efforts and reject excessive bureaucracy.” Last month, the Trump administration announced plans to cut the Pentagon’s 950,000-employee civilian workforce by 5 to 8 percent. 
  • The Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of inflation, the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, increased 2.5 percent year-over-year in February, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported Friday—the same annual rate from one month earlier. After stripping out more volatile food and energy prices, core PCE increased at a 2.8 percent annual rate in February, exceeding economists’ expectations. Consumer spending, meanwhile, grew 0.4 percent last month—a smaller-than-expected increase.

Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ Looms 

Vehicles awaiting shipment are parked at a port on March 27, 2025 in Yokohama, Japan. (Photo by Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images)
Vehicles awaiting shipment are parked at a port on March 27, 2025 in Yokohama, Japan. (Photo by Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images)

In a December 2018 Twitter thread criticizing China for its unfair trade practices, President Donald Trump declared himself “a Tariff Man.” But back then, the conventional wisdom was that this sort of tough talk was all bark and no bite. Trump implemented a series of tariffs during his first term, but the duties represented a significantly pared-back version of the trade war he had initially envisioned.

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