Washington Edition
Possible crack in wall of silence
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Bloomberg
by Akayla Gardner

This is Washington Edition, the newsletter about money, power and politics in the nation’s capital. Every Friday, White House correspondent Akayla Gardner delivers a roundup of the key news and events in politics, policy and economics that you need to know. Sign up here and follow us at @bpolitics. Email our editors here.

A Little Daylight

Until about 24 hours ago, though American officials might say differently, the trade standoff between the US and China has been marked by the silent treatment. 

President Donald Trump has repeatedly said that he’s waiting for a call from China’s Xi Jinping to address talks about easing his escalating tariffs on Chinese goods. 

And despite assertions by Trump and other officials that the US and China were talking at some level, Xi’s foreign ministry shot down the idea that negotiations were underway.

Then suddenly late yesterday China said that outreach from American officials has opened the doors to assessing possible discussions between the world’s two biggest economic players.

It was the first sign of a possible break in the US-China trade war triggered by Trump’s dizzying mass tariff rollout last month.

Trump last month Photographer: BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP

US duties on Chinese imports now sit at 145%, which China responded to by levying 125% tariffs on US goods.

It’s a long way from here to a deal, but even the prospect of negotiations with China could have ripple effects for discussions with other nations, according to Richard Stern, who leads the Heritage Foundation’s centers for economic and budget policy. 

“A lot of the conversation everywhere is about China,” Stern said. 

It was enough, for now, to help lift some of the gloom in financial markets. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 both rose today, a second straight week of gains that erased losses that followed Trump’s tariff escalation last month.

But many are still holding their breath.

“It’s a hard place to be starting negotiations,” said Phil Luck, director of the economics program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, who described the dynamics thus far between the nations as a “battle of egos.”

Craig Singleton, senior China fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said “it would be premature to declare a thaw.” 

“Trump wants concessions. Xi wants relief first,” he said. “Until that asymmetry is resolved, the tariffs — and the underlying mistrust — aren’t going anywhere.”

Other developments this week:

  • Waltz out: Mike Waltz, who inadvertently added a journalist to a group chat about a Yemen airstrike, became the first high-profile official ousted from his assignment in Trump's second term. The president named his former national security adviser as his new nominee for the US ambassador to the United Nations - filling a spot left vacant after Representative Elise Stefanik was convinced to remain in her House seat to prevent the possible loss of a key Republican vote. The job is subject to Senate confirmation. That will give Democrats their first, perhaps only, chance to grill him under oath about the group chat and the role of other administration officials in it.
  • Court chronicles: An updated class action lawsuit is taking aim at the State Department’s efforts to revoke thousands of visas for international college students, Bloomberg Law’s Andrew Kreighbaum reports. It also challenged the agency’s decision to remove student records from federal databases. The Trump administration has sought to deter international students from participating in protests against the war in Gaza and cracked down on hate speech on college campuses, sparking a debate about free speech and due process for immigrants.
  • Double down: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who faced questions about his support for women in the military during his confirmation hearings, said this week that his department would pull out of participation of a bipartisan initiative designed to increase women’s participation in armed conflict resolution. The move underscored Hegseth’s deep opposition to anything suggesting race or gender is part of the equation. Notably, Trump signed it into law during his first term and it was co-sponsored in Congress by two members of his current cabinet.

Don’t Miss

The president asked Congress to slash $163 billion from domestic agencies and boost military spending 13% to $1.01 trillion in a preliminary outline of his 2026 budget request.

Trump has set his sights on the pharmaceutical industry to shoulder part of the cost of his tax cuts, pressing congressional Republicans to force drugmakers to accept lower prices on prescriptions covered by Medicaid.

Trump declared that Harvard University would lose its tax-exempt status, stepping up his attack on the Ivy League school by threatening to choke off an array of financial benefits.

US job growth was robust in April and the unemployment rate held steady despite deep uncertainty over Trump’s trade policies, which economists expect will dent hiring plans over the coming months.

More than 180 companies have filed over 1,100 requests for tariff exclusions to import Chinese-made machinery that they say they need to set up or expand manufacturing facilities in the US.

Some auto workers are all-in on Trump’s trade war — and they don’t mind if it causes some short-term pain for both Wall Street and Main Street to restore American manufacturing.

Trump ordered an end to taxpayer subsidies for National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service, a longstanding goal of some Republicans who have accused the media outlets of bias.

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson denounced what she called “relentless attacks” on the federal judiciary, saying efforts to intimidate judges were threatening the Constitution and the rule of law.

The government reached a settlement in principal with the estate of Ashli Babbitt, the protester shot and killed by a police officer as she was trying to force her way into the House chamber during the Capitol riot.

The US reported 51 new measles infections on Friday, an increase of 6% from the previous week as Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the nation’s top health official, pushed for research into unproven treatments.

Administration officials have prepared a set of options for Trump to increase economic pressure on Russia, as President Vladimir Putin drags his feet over attempts to end the war in Ukraine.

The Department of Education is restarting collections on defaulted student loans after more than five years, with wage garnishment for borrowers who are not making payments set to begin later in the summer.

Watch & Listen

Today on Bloomberg Television’s Balance of Power early edition at 1 p.m., hosts Joe Mathieu and Kailey Leinz interviewed Democratic Representative Mikie Sherrill about the controversy around Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth as well as her bid to become governor of New Jersey.

On the program at 5 p.m., they talk with Republican Representative Mike Flood about the president’s budget outline, the tax and spending plan in Congress and tariffs.

On the Big Take podcast, Bloomberg’s Shelly Banjo joins host Sarah Holder to talk about what first quarter earnings reports are revealing about companies’ reactions to Trump’s trade war. Listen on iHeart, Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Chart of the Day

High mortgage rates and high prices have created unprecedented affordability hurdles for millions of Americans. It takes a household income of $114,000 annually to afford a median-priced home, and the threshold is much higher in some metro areas. That’s up 70.1% from $67,000 just six years ago, according to the Realtor.com April Housing Trends Report. It assumes a 30-year fixed mortgage, a 20% down payment, and no more than 30% of gross monthly income spent on housing. In the Washington, DC, area, where the median listing price for a home in the Washington area was $622,983 last month, a household needs $164,682 to afford a typical home, up 59.1% from April 2019. Five California markets top the list for housing costs, led by San Jose where the median priced home costs $1.4 million, implying an income of $370,069 needed to meet affordability benchmarks. — Alex Tanzi

What’s Next

The nation’s trade balance in March will be reported Tuesday.

The Federal Reserve next meets next Tuesday and Wednesday.

March data on consumer credit will be released on Wednesday.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent testifies about the state of the international financial system before the House Financial Services Committee Wednesday.

Wholesale sales and inventories for March will be reported Thursday.

Seen Elsewhere

  • The US agency responsible for doling out supplemental Medicaid payments has been slow in approving funds, forcing some hospitals to cut staff and delay paying suppliers, the Wall Street Journal reports.
  • Army plans for a potential military parade for the service's 250th anniversary celebration on June 14, also Trump's birthday, call for 6,600 soldiers and hundreds of vehicles, the Associated Press reports.
  • Maryland Governor Wes Moore, a rising Democratic Party star, insists he's not running for president in 2028, but he is making moves that would lay the groundwork for a possible bid, Politico reports.

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