China calls reports of ongoing US tariff talks ‘baseless’ while Trump claims administration ‘actively’ seeking deal – live | Trump administration

China calls reports of ongoing US tariff talks ‘baseless’ while Trump claims administration ‘actively’ seeking deal – live | Trump administration

China calls reports of ongoing US tariff talks ‘baseless’

Beijing said on Thursday that any claims of ongoing trade talks with Washington were “baseless”, a day after Donald Trump suggested there were active discussions with China about tariffs.

Asked on Wednesday if his administration was “actively” talking to China, the US president said: “Actively. Everything is active. Everybody wants to be a part of what we’re doing.”

Trump told reporters in the Oval Office that he would set tariffs over the next couple of weeks, insisting that a deal with Beijing “depends on them”.

Pushing back at these comments earlier today, He Yadong, a spokesperson for China’s ministry of commerce, said:

There are currently no economic and trade negotiations between China and the United States.

Any claims about progress in China-US economic and trade negotiations are baseless rumors without factual evidence.

The US put 145% tariffs on imports from China and it responded with a 125% tax on US products.

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Key events

Defense secretary Pete Hegseth “directed the installation of Signal, a commercially available messaging app, on a desktop computer in his Pentagon office”, according to the Washington Post (paywall).

Per the Post’s report, Hegseth and his aides discussed “how they could circumvent the lack of cellphone service in much of the Pentagon and more quickly coordinate with the White House and other top Trump officials using the encrypted app”. But it was also “a work-around that enabled him to use Signal in a classified space, where his cellphone and other personal electronics are not permitted”.

Hegseth’s repeated disclosures of sensitive military intelligence in unsecured Signal group chats have led to growing concerns his behavior has weakened the Pentagon in the eyes of its foreign adversaries and made him and his entourage a top espionage target. Democrats and a number of conservatives have called for his immediate resignation.

Pete Hegseth has faced calls to resign over his use of Signal to discuss sensitive military operations. Photograph: Will Oliver/EPA
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