accomplished whatever they think is important for their lives i do feel that they do that. if you have the economy softly up a bit slowing down a little bit the show is not a challenge to president trump s probably didn t his own sense that he s the right person to steward to manage the economy and to reinvigorate the economy because that s that s where the next election will probably be decided absolutely and that s why his his strategy here particularly on trade and the trade standoff with china it has yet to play out and if it plays out in his favor meaning if china actually makes concessions if the europeans make concessions then you know he will have one right now it s not looking very good because the american economy is slowing down a bit it s still growing much you know at a much stronger pace than most of the european economy is but i think that you know it s probably be a few a few months before we know where that goes but there are signs that you know he s
melissa: thinks to brian kilmeade. brian: thanks for having me. melissa: that s all you ve got close to mark s final thought? brian: my final thought is the president never stops. he s going to new orleans comings going back to clemson, we cover it all. melissa: thanks to christ, as well. we are back here on the couch at noon eastern tomorrow, but for now, here s harris. harris: and we have the president of the united states on the ground in new orleans right now. he is said to speak to thousands of the nation s farmers. the government shutdown stretches into day 24, and so far we are told not to expect a deal insight at this point. we are outnumbered overtime now. i m harris faulkner. right now, the president this come from moments good. we covered it live. it hasn t even been three and half minutes yet. in new orleans come over he will address the american farm bureau s 100 annual convention. this, as some farmers are reportedly struggling after the partial shutdown s
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retaliatory tariffs levied by china last month. that was in the middle of cherry harvest. about 80% of the u.s. cherries come here from the pacific northwest, idaho, washington state, oregon. $127 million alone worth of cherries went to china, which accounts for about 12% of the cherry market here out at washington state. i want to introduce you to burt. he s a cherry grower in washington. cherry harvest just wrapped up. this is what he told us. washington is the largest producer of sweet cherries and of apples in the nation. so agriculture in general is very important to this valley but those are two of the biggies. what s your concern with the current trade standoff right now? well, it definitely costs the cherry industry quite a bit of money this year. most of my cherries have been going to either japan, taiwan or
let s turn to business. a new round of u.s. tariffs on $16 billion worth of chinese goods kicked in this morning, as officials from the two countries meet to try to end the trade standoff. cnbc s how might these new tariffs impact the upcoming talks? ironic timing, isn t it? 25% tariffs on an extra $16 billion worth of goods from china chemical products and china responded equally on another $16 billion worth of american goods that include chemical products and diesel fuel, as well. that brings the total to $50 million on both sides. but, of course, the u.s. considering an extra $200 billion worth of tariffs on chinese goods. to be honest, not a solid backdrop for the talks this week because earlier in the week president trump said he s not anticipating the talks to be that productive. but other big news, as well.