
Articles
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1 week ago |
bylinesupplement.com | Adrian Goldberg
George Orwell famously described sport as “war minus the shooting”. Could the same maxim be applied to Donal Trump’s tariffs? Adrian Goldberg discusses the long-term political and economic consequences of the US President’s ‘Liberation Day’ policies with Alexandra Hall Hall, a former UK diplomat now resident in Washington DC, and Simon Nixon, previously chief European commentator at the Wall Street Journal.
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2 weeks ago |
bylinesupplement.com | Adrian Goldberg
Is the UK preparing to put the brakes on the transformation away from petrol and diesel cars in response to Trump’s tariffs? It certainly looks like it. British manufacturers are being relatively lightly punished overall in the US president’s new world order – tariffs of goods exported to the States from this country have been set at 10%, significantly lower than those imposed on the EU and China. But there’s an exception for cars made in Britain, which will face a 25% Trump “tax”.
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2 weeks ago |
bylinesupplement.com | Adrian Goldberg
Current time: 0:00 / Total time: -29:48Audio playback is not supported on your browser. Please upgrade. Adrian Goldberg discusses Trump’s tariffs with Scott Lucas, a professor of US and international politics at UCD Clinton in Dublin, and Jen Hassum, executive director of the Broadbent Institute, a social democratic think tank in Canada. Discussion about this episodeAs the name might suggest, the Byline Times podcast is the podcast of the Byline Times - telling you what the papers DON'T say.
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3 weeks ago |
bylinesupplement.com | Adrian Goldberg
Adrian Goldberg discusses the extent to which Donald Trump represents a threat to democracy with Jay Rosen, Professor of Journalism at New York University. This episode was recorded at the Byline Festival last summer at Dartington Hall, more than three months before the presidential election.
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4 weeks ago |
bylinesupplement.com | Adrian Goldberg
Has Labour declared war on welfare? The party was traditionally seen as a friend of the dispossessed, the downtrodden and the disabled, but Chancellor Rachel Reeves is looking to reduce the benefits bill by almost £5 billion pounds through changes revealed in her spring statement, as well as previously announced adjustments to eligibility for the Personal Independence Payment.
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