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Senate passes bill to nullify Trump’s sweeping global tariffs on more than 100 nations – US politics live | Trump administration

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Senate votes to end Trump’s global tariffs

For a third time this week, a bipartisan group of Senators rallied to nullify the global “reciprocal” tariffs imposed by the Donald Trump on more than 100 US trading partners.

The 51-47 tally came just hours after Trump emerged from crucial trade talks with the Chinese leader Xi Jinping, a meeting the US president described as “amazing” and “truly great”. Trump said Chinese imports would now be subject to a 47% tariff, down 10 percentage points.

Republican senators Susan Collins of Maine, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Rand Paul of Kentucky joined all Democrats in favor of the resolution, as they did to repeal the levies on Canada and Brazil earlier this week.

The measure, however, is all but certain to stall in the House, where the Republican majority approved new rules to ensure such resolutions do reach the floor for a vote. Nevertheless it shows a rare degree of Republican push back against a president who has had no qualms trampling Congress’s power. It has also proven to be an effective way for out-of-power Democrats to expose cracks between the president and members of his party, forcing Republican senators to choose between their long-standing support for free trade and Trump’s tariff policy.

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Key events

A new analysis by Guardian journalists José Olivares and Will Craft found that ICE increasingly keeps people in holding rooms with little oversight, as some facilities see a 600% rise in detention length

They report that these holding facilities – located at ICE offices, in federal buildings and other locations around the country – are typically used to detain people after they have been arrested but before they are transferred or released. In many cases, they consist of small concrete rooms with no beds and are designed to only be used for a few hours.

Previously, ICE was prohibited by its own internal policies from detaining people for longer than 12 hours in these holding facilities. But in a June memo, the agency waived the 12-hour rule, saying people recently arrested by ICE can be detained in the holding rooms for up to three days.

Here are their major findings:

  • ICE has used at least 170 ICE holding facilities nationwide, including at 25 ICE field offices.

  • The Trump administration and its campaign of mass deportation has led to a near across the board increase in the time people are forced to spend in detention in holding rooms. After Donald Trump’s inauguration, the average time that people spend in detention increased at 127 hold rooms across the country.

  • Despite ICE’s rule change in June, the agency is continuing to violate its own policy by detaining people at these sites for multiple days at a time.

  • In some cases, such as a New York City holding facility located on the 10th floor of a federal building in downtown Manhattan, time in detention increased by nearly 600% on average after the June rule change.

  • In one case the Guardian discovered by looking through agency data, ICE documented that a 62-year-old man was held inside that same New York City holding facility for two and a half months.

  • The Guardian also found an additional 63 people at the site who were held there for longer than one week, between Trump’s inauguration and late July.

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