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Germany expects zero GDP growth this year, blames Trump tariffs
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'Greatest-ever' Vardy to leave Leicester at end of season
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'They want to destroy us': Kyiv hit in biggest Russian attack in months
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Nissan forecasts huge annual net loss of up to $5.3 bn
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Stock markets mostly fall as hopes of US-China trade deal dampen
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Alcaraz withdraws from Madrid Open with injury
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Furious India eyes response to Pakistan after Kashmir attack
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Africans eye a pope from among their own
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Three Chinese astronauts blast off for Tiangong space station
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Newcastle boss Howe returns to work after pneumonia
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Asian markets mixed as China dispels Trump talk of tariff negotiations
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Countries could use forests to 'mask' needed emission cuts: report
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Zelensky cuts short South Africa trip after deadly attack on Kyiv
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Sri Lanka Buddhists overwhelm city in bid to see sacred tooth
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Thousands gather for second day to view pope
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Teenage suspect in attack on rabbi sentenced to 16 months in prison
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Americans wary of Trump's economic about-faces
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Kashmiri students say they have been threatened in India after attack
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Ugandans kill migrating storks in desperation for food
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Georgia's rugby dreams built on wild folk game
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'Massive' Russian missile attack kills nine in Kyiv
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S.Africa welcomes Ukraine's leader in diplomatic shift
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'We'll see': Russians outside Moscow have little faith in Trump
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Tesla's EU sales plunge as Musk takes flak
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Chinese Catholics mourn Pope Francis, mull Church's future
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Russian missile attack kills nine in Kyiv
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Tatum-less Celtics take hard-fought victory as Cavs, Rockets win
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Tigres fight back for draw with Cruz Azul in CONCACAF semi
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Asian markets mixed as Trump soothes Fed fears
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Inter return to tough Scudetto defence after treble dream dies
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Asian markets mostly up as Trump soothes Fed fears
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Australia to stockpile critical minerals in strategic reserve
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Former S. Korea president Moon Jae-in indicted for corruption: prosecution
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S. Korea's economy shrinks in first quarter as trade war hits exports
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Tanzania opposition leader due in court on treason charge
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Chinese business in Vietnam struggles with Trump tariffs uncertainty
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EU top diplomat Kallas seeks footing as Trump upends West
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Bessent says 'no currency targets' in Japan tariff talks
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Yemen's Huthis seek propaganda boost from deadly US strikes
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Chinese astronauts set to blast off for space station
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Tatum-less Celtics win to join Cavs with 2-0 NBA playoff edge
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SK hynix posts record profits thanks to strong AI demand
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UK hosts global energy summit with renewables under attack
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Huge crowds expected for second day of pope lying in state
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Nintendo bullish on Switch 2 pre-sales in Japan
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Argentina 'slum priests' take pope's message to the poor
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Russia launches Kyiv missile attack, hours after Trump blames Zelensky
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121 metre long cake gives a taste for records
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Oasis fans lose 'over £2 million' in UK ticket scams

Americans wary of Trump's economic about-faces
President Donald Trump's various U-turns are leaving Americans disillusioned -- especially after he was elected on vows of guaranteeing economic prosperity.
He has floated wanting to fire the Fed chair before backing off for now, and he slapped tariffs on China only to then promise compromise and mollification.
"There is no chance the US flip-flops on trade the past month were remotely planned," Joseph Grieco, professor of political science at Duke University, told AFP.
"It's been one improvisation after another."
In a Pew Research Center survey conducted in early April, when President Trump was already downgrading his trade war with many countries to focus his ire on China, just 40 percent of respondents approved of his job performance -- a seven-point slide from February.
With the exception of Bill Clinton and now Trump, US presidents dating back to Ronald Reagan have had an approval rating topping 50 percent after their first 100 days in office, Pew noted.
However, the pollsters pointed out that the ratings for Trump, ever the divider who plays to his strengths, are essentially on par with those in 2017, at the same time in his first term.
- Majority dissatisfied -
Specifically, nearly six in 10 Pew respondents were critical of the Republican billionaire's trade policies.
Another opinion poll, by Reuters/Ipsos, notes that just 37 percent of Americans now say they are satisfied with the president's economic approach.
This is substantially below the upbeat numbers early in the first term for Trump, whose strong point, politically speaking, has always been the economy.
Results of a YouGov poll from early April reinforced the bad news for the real estate tycoon. A majority of Americans, 51 percent, were now dissatisfied with Trump's economic policies.
That was a four-point slide from late March, before his earth-shaking tariff announcements -- which were themselves followed a week later by a sweeping U-turn by Trump.
Absent a clear White House strategy, the world's markets are on edge, alternately soaring or plunging on the slightest remarks by Trump or his top officials on trade or monetary policy.
Such whipsaws have brought anxiety to millions of American investors, especially those whose retirement savings are in stock-related plans.
Concern only grew with the president's amped-up criticism of US Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, calling him a "loser" for refusing to cut interest rates.
The attack on the central bank's independence sent markets tumbling -- before Trump backed off, assuring on Tuesday he had no intention of firing Powell.
- Adulation, too -
It is virtually impossible to know how the trade confrontation with China will play out, even as Trump says the 145 percent tariffs he has slapped on the world's second-largest economy will be reduced sharply.
According to a recent Gallup poll, 53 percent of Americans believe their personal financial situation will worsen. Since 2001, the renowned polling organization has noted how most people it surveyed have expressed optimism about their wallets.
Increasing worry would translate to a reluctance to consume, which could slow economic growth.
While the major opinion polls reflect a growing mistrust of White House economic policy, most also agree that such pessimism has yet to reach Trump's core base of supporters, whose adulation of the president largely has remained strong through thick and thin.
In today's hyper-divided political America, 70 percent of Republican voters and Republican-leaning independents still support Trump's tariff hikes, while 90 percent of Democrats oppose them, according to Pew.
K.Hofmann--VB