Live updates: Trump presidential transition news | CNN Politics

Live Updates

Latest on presidential transition: Trump vows tariff hikes on Day 1

Hulk Hogan talks weight loss after quitting alcohol
Hulk Hogan says Trump floated idea for how he could serve in administration
02:22 - Source: CNN

What we're covering

Tariff hikes: President-elect Donald Trump has promised massive hikes in tariffs on goods from Mexico, Canada and China starting on the first day of his administration. The move will be in retaliation for illegal immigration and “crime and drugs” coming across the border, he said. Mexico’s president responded, saying that “neither threats nor tariffs” will solve immigration or drug issues in the US.

Federal cases dropped: Meanwhile, special counsel Jack Smith is dropping the federal election subversion and the mishandling of classified documents cases against Trump. Here are our takeaways on the president-elect’s legal victories.

Confirmation hearings: Republicans are now bracing for how they’ll navigate the confirmation process with some of Trump’s most controversial selections. Cabinet picks like Pete Hegseth for defense secretary and Tulsi Gabbard for spy chief are presenting a test for GOP lawmakers in the narrowly controlled Senate.

14 Posts

Republican Jewish Coalition endorses Randy Fine for vacant Congress seat in Florida

The Republican Jewish Coalition endorsed Randy Fine for Congress in Florida’s 6th Congressional District after President-elect Donald Trump threw support behind Fine in a Truth Social Post on Saturday.

Rep. Michael Waltz, who previously represented Florida’s 6th Congressional District, is leaving Congress to serve as Trump’s national security adviser, creating an even thinner Republican majority in the House until his replacement is sworn in.

Trump's chosen health leaders could face challenges keeping politics separate from science

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. gives a keynote speech during the Bitcoin 2024 conference at Music City Center July 26 in Nashville.

The announcements came Friday night, one after another, of President-elect Donald Trump’s picks for the country’s premier health leadership roles: a New York family physician and Fox News medical contributor for surgeon general; a Florida physician and former congressman to lead the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; a surgeon and researcher at Johns Hopkins for the US Food and Drug Administration.

Public health experts, former government officials and researchers — including 10 who spoke with CNN — began meting out praise, critiques and questions about Trump’s picks: Dr. Janette Nesheiwat for US surgeon general, Dr. David Weldon for CDC director and Dr. Marty Makary for FDA commissioner, each of whom will face a Senate confirmation hearing.

Several health experts said Makary and Nesheiwat were reasonable choices who may be tested under a federal health department with Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a prominent anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist, at the helm of the US Department of Health and Human Services.

Several also raised concerns about Weldon, Trump’s pick to lead the CDC, who had previously introduced legislation that would have shifted vaccine safety oversight away from the CDC and has repeatedly raised questions about the safety of vaccines that had already been studied.

A key challenge for all of the Trump administration’s new public health leaders, the experts said, will be keeping politics out of science.

CNN has reached out to Nesheiwat and Makary for comment and did not receive a response. CNN was not able to reach Weldon.

GM, Ford and auto stocks drop on Trump’s tariff threats

New vehicles sit on a Dodge Chrysler-Jeep Ram dealership's lot on October 3, 2023 in Miami.

Shares of General Motors, Ford and Chrysler owner Stellantis all retreated Tuesday after President-elect Donald Trump vowed to impose 25% tariffs on all products coming from Mexico and Canada on his first day in office.

The stock drops reflect concerns that Trump’s tariffs will mess up delicate supply chains that rely on both Mexico and Canada for parts and production.

Trump has promised to use tariffs to protect workers and American-made cars, but in reality the auto industry has long operated as if North America is a single, unified market.

Sometimes parts pass over the border of the three countries multiple times before installation is completed and cars are sold at dealerships. The same is true for foreign automakers that have plants in the United States, such as Toyota and Honda.

GM shares suffered the steepest losses, dropping 8% as of Tuesday morning. Stellantis, the parent of Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge and Ram, lost nearly 5%. Ford shares fell 2%.

US-listed shares of Toyota and Honda fell about 2% apiece.

Texas shifts from feuding with Biden over the border to offering the blueprint for Trump

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott speaks at a news conference in Austin, Texas on June 8, 2021.

Texas is quickly becoming the blueprint for how incoming Trump officials expect to work with states on border security – a stark pivot from recent years when it was the epicenter of a bitter feud between state and federal officials.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott challenged President Joe Biden at almost every turn on the handling of the US southern border, as the state grappled with multiple border surges. The ongoing feud has resulted in a slew of lawsuits over Texas’ operations and public spats over the handling of the border.

As part of his Operation Lone Star, launched in 2021, Abbott transported migrants on buses to Democratic-led cities, blocked a portion of the border to federal agents, set up buoys in the Rio Grande to deter migrants, and signed a bill into law that would give state law enforcement the authority to detain migrants, among other measures.

The state also recently announced a new unit of troopers that will patrol the border on horseback. “We’re not letting up at all,” Abbott said last week on Fox News’ “Hannity.”

In a spate of recent announcements, Texas said it would offer up to 1,400 acres of land for the government to use for detention centers and introduced a new unit of troopers to patrol the border on horseback.

Those moves have frustrated the Biden White House. But Texas’ preparations to bolster its operation on the US southern border is serving as a roadmap for how President-elect Donald Trump’s team plans to lean on states as part of its immigration plans, according to two sources familiar with discussions.

“We need to cooperate; we need to work together,” one of the sources told CNN. “We’ve had to do it at a much greater level over last few years.”

In a sign of the changing nature of the relationship, Trump is weighing one of Abbott’s senior advisors — Texas border czar Michael Banks — to lead US Customs and Border Protection, according to multiple sources.

Read more about how Texas is providing a blueprint for handling the border to an incoming Trump administration.

Footwear industry urges Trump to rethink Day 1 tariffs

A leading footwear industry trade group warns that President-elect Donald Trump’s newly announced tariffs on Canada, China and Mexico will lift prices on Americans.

The trade group represents dozens of companies including Nike, DSW, Cros, Under Armour and Walmart.

Although Trump has insisted that his tariffs will not cause inflation, Priest warned there will be a “profound impact” on working families and the broader economy.

The footwear CEO said the levies will “directly increase costs for retailers and consumers, leading to higher prices on everyday essentials like shoes.”

The United States relies on China in particular to import sneakers and other footwear. Trump announced Monday night he will impose day one additional tariffs of 10% on China.

“During this holiday season, Americans do not want to see or hear about an additional tax on items they need most. Families deserve relief, not policies that make it harder to afford gifts, winter essentials, and footwear for the new year,” Priest said.

Trudeau says he had a call with Trump following tariff announcement

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attends a press conference on October 14, on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Canada.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau confirmed he called Donald Trump shortly after the US president-elect announced that he would impose massive hikes on goods coming from Canada, Mexico and China.

“We obviously talked about laying out the facts, talking about how, how the intense and effective connections between our two countries flow back and forth,” Trudeau told reporters in Ottawa before arriving at a Cabinet meeting Tuesday. “We talked about some of the challenges that we can work on together. It was a good call. This is something that we can do, laying out the facts, moving forward in constructive ways.”

The brief call was focused on border security and trade, a senior Canadian government source previously told CNN. The source characterized the call as productive and said that Trudeau and Trump promised to stay in touch in the days to come.

Read more about Trump and tariffs here.

Mexican president: "Neither threats nor tariffs will solve the issue of migration or drug consumption"

Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum listens to a question during her daily press conference at the National Palace in Mexico City on November 6.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum responded Tuesday to US President-elect Donald Trump’s threat to impose a general tariff of 25% on imports from Mexico, warning the former president that “neither threats nor tariffs will solve the issue of migration or drug consumption.”

At her daily news conference, Sheinbaum started by reading out a letter to Trump, who had threatened tariffs if Mexico didn’t stop “criminals and drugs” from entering the US.

“Imposing one tariff would mean another comes in response, continuing like this until we put shared companies at risk,” she added.

“For example, some of the largest exporters from Mexico to the United States are General Motors, Stellantis and Ford Motor Company, which arrived in Mexico 80 years ago,” Sheinbaum said. “Why impose a tax that puts them at risk? It’s unacceptable and would cause inflation and job losses in Mexico and the United States.”

Sheinbaum added that the economic strength of North America lies in maintaining the business relationship between the two countries, which will allow them to be more competitive compared to other economic blocs.

Analysis: Trump’s avoidance of January 6 accountability will resonate for generations to come

In this January 6, 2021 photo, then-President Donald Trump speaks to supporters from The Ellipse near the White House in Washington, DC.

Special counsel Jack Smith set out to prove in the United States of America v. Donald J. Trump that even presidents are not above the law.

Instead, his failed prosecutions ended up making Trump even more powerful as the ebullient president-elect prepares to return to office on January 20.

Smith’s decision to bow to the inevitable and shelve his cases over Trump’s alleged election interference and hoarding of classified documents represented a momentous victory for the 45th and 47th president.

The federal elections case led to a Supreme Court ruling granting a president limited immunity for official acts. This is likely to reinforce Trump’s belief that he will have almost unchecked authority and will therefore reverberate through the next four years and generations to come.

And a president — who refused to accept the will of voters, the bedrock principle of democracy, after he lost an election and then told supporters to “fight like hell” before they invaded the US Capitol — will pay no lasting legal price.

There will be short- and long-term consequences from Trump escaping accountability.

His second term, which he already pledged to devote to “retribution,” has the potential to unfold in an even greater atmosphere of impunity than his first one.

Smith’s inability to bring the president-elect to account — for the most flagrant attack on the integrity of elections of modern times — will also echo down the ages.

Many Republicans are convinced by now that Trump was unfairly targeted. But some future president, decades from now, might decide to meddle in the result of an election that they lost in the knowledge that a predecessor got away with it.

Read the full analysis.

How seniors who voted for Harris are feeling about Trump's win

Pat Levin, 95 years young, is wrestling daily with something new and depressing.

“It’s left me very afraid,” she said of the 2024 election result. “Afraid of the future. Afraid of everything.”

Her first memories of politics are of Franklin Roosevelt, and the Pennsylvanian has lived through Vietnam, Watergate, the September 11 attacks and more. And yet this feels more significant, more threatening.

Hear what older voters who backed Vice President Kamala Harris are saying in the wake of the election:

still_21148902_156807.159_still.jpg
How seniors who voted for Harris are feeling about Trump's win
05:05 - Source: CNN

Levin is among the voters who participated in CNN’s All Over the Map project, an effort to track the 2024 campaign through the eyes and experiences of Americans who live in key battlegrounds or are part of critical voting groups, or both.

Read more from John King’s conversations with voters.

Mexican economic secretary has said his country could reciprocate Trump's tariffs

Shipping containers are stacked at the Port of Manzanillo in Manzanillo, Mexico, on Tuesday, November 19.

Mexico could reciprocate if US President-elect Donald Trump follows through on his campaign proposal to impose a generalized 25% tariff on imports of Mexican products when he takes up his second term, Economy Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said earlier this month before Trump reiterated that promise on Monday.

Ebrard’s comments came two weeks before Trump’s latest social media post promising to implement steep tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China. But his promise was consistent with policies Trump vowed to implement while he was a candidate. During his campaign, Trump said that if elected president, he would impose 25% tariffs on products imported from Mexico if his government failed to stem the flow of “criminals and drugs” entering the country.

Ebrard added at the time that this decision would have “a huge cost for the (United States) economy,” first of all in inflation.

Earlier this month, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said that work was already being done to demonstrate the importance for the United States of the trade agreement it has with Mexico and Canada, and she was confident that high-level dialogues would continue on issues such as migration, drug and arms trafficking, as well as the trade relationship.

Sheinbaum is expected to address reporters later Tuesday.

Key context: Mexico is the second-largest supplier to the United States. Imports from Mexico totaled almost $455 billion in 2022, according to the Office of the US Trade Representative. Among the products purchased are vehicles, fruits, vegetables and electrical equipment.

Analysis: The last line of defense for Biden’s climate agenda? Green investments

The traverse wind farm as seen from the top of one of the turbines on April 19.

Can the green shoots of clean energy break through the “brown blockade”?

The brown blockade is the phrase I’ve used to describe the hardening tendency of the states most deeply integrated into the existing oil and gas economy, as either major producers or consumers of fossil fuels, to support Republican presidential and congressional candidates who are resolutely opposed to federal action to combat climate change.

Those states moved sharply toward Donald Trump and the GOP in this month’s election. The president-elect won a stunning 26 of the 27 states whose economies are the most reliant on the fossil fuels that produce the carbon emissions driving global climate change. Each of the GOP’s four Senate pickups also came in those higher-carbon states.

In the campaign, Trump promised to take a wrecking ball to virtually all of President Joe Biden’s efforts aimed at reducing carbon emissions and accelerating the shift from fossil fuels to lower-carbon alternatives. The critical role that the states most tightly bound into the existing fossil fuel economy played in both Trump’s victory and the GOP’s success in recapturing the Senate, will only encourage him in that direction.

The only dynamic that might complicate that offensive, even at the margins, may be the green shoots sprouting across large swathes of red America. This torrent of new investments in wind and solar power, the semiconductors used in clean energy, and especially electric vehicles and their batteries – triggered by the Inflation Reduction Act and other economic development bills signed by Biden – has flowed disproportionately into Republican-held states and congressional districts.

Those huge current and planned investments in new manufacturing plants may represent the sole opportunity to preserve any elements of Biden’s blueprint for growing the domestic clean energy industry.

Read the full analysis.

Trump ups the ante on tariffs, vowing massive taxes on goods from Mexico, Canada and China on Day 1

President-elect Donald Trump on Monday promised massive hikes in tariffs on goods coming from Mexico, Canada and China starting on the first day of his administration, a policy that could sharply increase costs for American businesses and consumers.

The move, Trump said, will be in retaliation for illegal immigration and “crime and drugs” coming across the border.

“On January 20th, as one of my many first Executive Orders, I will sign all necessary documents to charge Mexico and Canada a 25% Tariff on ALL products coming into the United States, and its ridiculous Open Borders,” Trump posted on his Truth Social platform. “This Tariff will remain in effect until such time as Drugs, in particular Fentanyl, and all Illegal Aliens stop this Invasion of our Country!”

Trump said America’s neighbors can “easily solve this long simmering problem.”

Similarly, Trump said that China will face higher tariffs on its goods – by 10% above any existing tariffs – until it prevents the flow of illegal drugs into the United States.

Responding to Trump’s announcement, Chinese Embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu said his country has been in communication with the US about counternarcotics operations and that “the idea of China knowingly allowing fentanyl precursors to flow into the United States runs completely counter to facts and reality.”

“About the issue of US tariffs on China, China believes that China-Us economic and trade cooperation is mutually beneficial in nature. No one will win a trade war or a tariff war,” Liu said in a statement to CNN.

Read more details here about Trump’s plan

A timeline of key dates between now and Inauguration Day

American voters have decided to rehire Donald Trump as president of the United States.

But he won’t take office until January 20, 2025, and there are multiple things that will happen between now and then. Throughout November, December and January, there will be a transition between the outgoing administration of President Joe Biden and the incoming Trump administration.

Here’s what to expect between now and Inauguration Day:

The pending federal cases against Trump were dropped. What to know about how we got here

Special Counsel Jack Smith delivers remarks on a recently unsealed indictment including four felony counts against Donald Trump on August 1, 2023 in Washington, DC.

Even before special counsel Jack Smith formally asked that his criminal cases — the 2020 election subversion prosecution and the charges of mishandling classified documents — against Donald Trump be dismissed, it was already guaranteed the president-elect would never see a jury.

Here’s what you need to know about Smith’s move to seek the cases’ dismissal and how his prosecutions got to this point:

Trump’s election and retribution promises made this day inevitable: Trump’s reelection this month ensured that his federal criminal cases would face an early end. The former president vowed during his campaign to fire Smith if voters sent him back to the White House – a move at odds with how other presidents have handled special counsels. In the end, though, Trump didn’t need to sack Smith. He was already benefiting from a legal strategy of delay that made sure no trials got underway before election, which ultimately forced Smith’s hand.

The Supreme Court played a major role: If part of what happened was that Smith simply ran out of time to pursue the case against Trump, then the six-justice conservative majority on the Supreme Court had a key role to play in slowing things down. The high court granted Trump sweeping immunity from criminal prosecution for official actions in a highly anticipated 6-3 decision that was handed down in July, limiting the special counsel’s ability to move forward.

Judge Cannon killed the classified documents case: Trump hit the jackpot when the case was assigned to Judge Aileen Cannon, an appointee of his with little trial experience. She threw a number of wrenches into the prosecutors’ case before dismissing it entirely this summer on the grounds that Smith was unlawfully appointed. Her handling of the charges was widely panned by legal experts.

Smith keeps door open for charges to be brought again: Smith said he was dropping the charges against the president-elect “without prejudice,” which in theory would keep open the door for charges to be brought again in the future.

Read more here about the special counsel’s case.