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Tensions flare as Harris & Trump continue campaigns

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www.youtube.com – THV11 – 2024-10-04 23:05:31

SUMMARY: Former President Donald Trump received a briefing on Hurricane Helen’s damage, expressing concern for missing people and calling it a severe storm. He criticized the Biden administration, claiming disaster relief funds were misallocated to assist migrants, alleging that criminals were entering the U.S. without evidence. Meanwhile, Vice President Kamala Harris campaigned in Michigan, highlighting a jobs report that added over 250,000 jobs while warning that Trump’s potential victory could result in significant job losses for auto workers in the state, echoing his previous unfulfilled promises.

Former President Trump and Vice President Harris are each on the campaign trail as tensions continue to flare. (Via CBS).

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News from the South - Arkansas News Feed

Arkansans paying millions more in tariff costs compared to 2024

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arkansasadvocate.com – Ainsley Platt – 2025-07-01 16:20:00


At a July 1, 2025 town hall in North Little Rock, experts discussed the significant impact of tariffs imposed by the Trump administration on Arkansas’s manufacturing and agriculture sectors. Farmers for Free Trade reported Arkansans paid $3.5 million in vehicle parts tariffs by April 2025, a sharp increase from $747,700 in April 2024. Tariffs raise costs for items like car parts, hand tools, and agricultural inputs such as fertilizer, while retaliatory tariffs from countries like China have caused a 43.7% drop in Arkansas soybean exports. Panelists stressed that tariffs increase costs and uncertainty, with limited prospects for domestic manufacturing jobs returning due to workforce shortages.

by Ainsley Platt, Arkansas Advocate
July 1, 2025

Arkansans are paying millions more for daily necessities like car parts as a result of tariffs placed on imports by the Trump administration, according to a report from Farmers for Free Trade. 

The national nonprofit discussed the report during a town hall meeting Tuesday in North Little Rock. According to the report, Arkansans paid $747,700 in import taxes for vehicle parts in April 2024, with an average tariff rate of 7.3%. In April 2025, that number more than tripled to $3.5 million, with the average tariff rate reaching 27.3%.

Vehicle parts are especially exposed to the tariffs instituted by President Donald Trump in response to what he has described as unfair trade practices by other countries. American car manufacturers have increasingly turned to Canada and Mexico for manufacturing parts for their vehicles in recent years, with more than half of American vehicles and parts coming from those two countries.

But the tariffs — and the back-and-forth they have created for businesses as the administration announced new levies and then backed away from them in order to negotiate — don’t only affect car parts. Arkansas also imports hand tools and air pumps and fans from other countries, and paid large tariff costs as a result.

“Arkansas companies have already experienced sharp tariff increases in March and April of this year. But the breadth of these proposed trade actions — if fully enacted — could result in even more severe cost burdens in the months ahead,” the report said.

The broader trade war also poses risk for agriculture, the state’s largest industry. 

During a panel discussion at Tuesday’s town hall at Jenkins Enterprises, longtime farmer and Corning Republican Sen. Blake Johnson said he believed the tariffs could force 20-30% of U.S. farmers to close their doors by December if relief doesn’t come, even as he said that tariffs were necessary and needed “so we can sell and buy in a fair market.”

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Farmers face a double-whammy from tariffs. They have high input costs for items like tractor parts and fertilizer that could increase more because of tariffs. Johnson said fertilizer that cost $450 a ton last year now costs close to $650.

Tariffs imposed by other nations in retaliation for U.S. import taxes are another risk. For example, about half of the state’s soybean exports were sent to China last year, according to the report. But after Trump levied tariffs on Chinese goods, the east Asian country imposed reciprocal tariffs on American-grown crops. Soybean exports from the U.S. to China were down 43.7% in April compared to the same time last year.

“That’s why we see the 50% fall off in Arkansas exports of soybeans, because our soybeans now are more expensive when we’re trying to sell into overseas markets [as a result of reciprocal tariffs],” said Brian Kuehl, the executive director of Farmers for Free Trade. 

Trump has argued that businesses should absorb the tariff costs. Short-term pain is necessary for long-term gain, he and his allies have said, in order to bring back manufacturing jobs to the U.S.

However, Steve Jenkins, the owner of Jenkins Enterprises, which makes branded products such as Arkansas Razorbacks flags and coffee cups, said that while the administration’s goal was admirable, it was not necessarily possible.

“People will say to me, ‘Well, why don’t you just buy it in America?’ Because those products are no longer made in America, and one of the reasons for that is simply because we don’t have enough people to do it,” Jenkins said.

The issue, Jenkins said, was that even if manufacturing came back to the U.S., there wouldn’t be a workforce to fill those jobs. As America’s economy developed, he said, manufacturing of many goods was sent to Japan, then Taiwan. And as those countries’ economies developed and began focusing on more complex products, some of that manufacturing then made its way to China.

“We’ve got jobs in America, we don’t have workers…those jobs are not going to come back to America,” he said. “They’re not going to be available in America, and we just don’t have the workers to support it.”

The U.S. unemployment rate was 4.2% in May, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Meanwhile, existing U.S. manufacturing has continued to contract, according to the Institute for Supply Management. Respondents to its June survey said broad uncertainty as a result of the tariffs has impacted their orders.

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Arkansas Advocate is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Arkansas Advocate maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Sonny Albarado for questions: info@arkansasadvocate.com.

The post Arkansans paying millions more in tariff costs compared to 2024 appeared first on arkansasadvocate.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

This article presents a balanced view of the impact of tariffs imposed during the Trump administration, reporting both the intended goals and the economic consequences. It includes perspectives from business owners, economists, farmers, and a Republican state senator, highlighting concerns about increased costs and retaliatory tariffs while acknowledging the rationale behind the trade policies. The tone remains factual and neutral, avoiding partisan language or ideological framing. The coverage focuses on the practical effects on Arkansas industries and does not overtly advocate for or against the tariffs, resulting in an overall centrist stance.

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News from the South - Arkansas News Feed

Beyoncé handles car tilting in air during Houston show

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www.youtube.com – THV11 – 2025-06-30 07:32:18

SUMMARY: During Beyoncé’s Houston show at NRG Stadium, a flying car she was riding in began to tilt dangerously mid-performance while she was singing “16 Carriages.” Calm but cautious, Beyoncé instructed the crew to stop and was safely lowered into the crowd, who cheered her on. No one was hurt, and the show continued after she thanked fans for their patience, noting Houston is her hometown and expressing trust in her fans. For her next show, the flying car stunt was dropped. The event was highly energetic, with fans dressed in elaborate outfits celebrating Beyoncé’s “Country Carter” tour.

Beyoncé faced a scary moment over the weekend when a flying car she was riding in tilted during her concert in Houston.

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Local Party Leaders Response to Trump's Bill

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www.youtube.com – 40/29 News – 2025-06-29 23:14:20

SUMMARY: Local party leaders in Arkansas express divided views on Trump’s bill advancing narrowly in the Senate. Republican Senator Bart Hester praises its progress, highlighting tax cuts and protections for Medicaid and SNAP benefits for vulnerable populations. In contrast, Arkansas Democratic Party’s Micah Wallace criticizes the bill for creating obstacles to healthcare and calls the slim margin a reflection of electoral stakes. Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders supports the bill overall but opposes the AI regulation section, which she says undermines state powers to control AI misuse. Leaders agree the bill holds significant consequences amid ongoing national debate.

Leaders in the Natural State speak out about the progress of President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill.”

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