After Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” trade tariffs rocked the global economy and raised fears of a recession in the spring, the president who swore he wouldn’t change agreed to pause his agenda for a few months.
The plan, according to the White House, was to open the door to new negotiations and new international agreements. Americans were told to look forward to “90 deals in 90 days.”
Ninety days later, Trump’s failures appear unavoidable. Instead of reaching 90 deals, the president and his team have come up with a few frameworks with a few countries, but that’s it. The grant total of new, finalized trade deals negotiated during the administration’s pause is zero.
And that appears to have given Trump an idea: It’s time to redefine the phrase “trade deal.” As The New York Times summarized:
The Trump administration is seeking ‘deals’ with countries around the globe, telling major trading partners that it is open for negotiations before higher tariffs kick in on Aug. 1. But what constitutes a trade deal these days has become a tricky question. For the president, a trade deal seems to be pretty much anything he wants it to be.
At his latest White House Cabinet meeting, for example, Trump told reporters, in reference to the tariff letters he’s begun sending to international trading partners, “We have a lot of them going out, but the deals are mostly my deal to them.” He added that striking actual trade deals is “just too time-consuming,” which was largely true — governing takes time and effort — but also an implicit acknowledgement that he couldn’t deliver on the White House’s promise.
It culminated in the president declaring, “I just want you to know a ‘letter’ means a ‘deal.’”
Trump on the EU: "We're probably two days off from sending them a letter. I just want you to know — a letter means a deal." (That is not a deal.)








