logo
Whitmer is trying to leverage her relationship with Trump again — this time on tariffs and Medicaid

Whitmer is trying to leverage her relationship with Trump again — this time on tariffs and Medicaid

CNNa day ago
Health care policy
Donald Trump
TariffsFacebookTweetLink
Follow
Democratic Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer is trying to use her recent positive relationship with President Donald Trump to get some breaks for her state — on both tariffs and Medicaid changes.
Whitmer met with Trump at the White House on Tuesday, where she laid out the negative impacts that tariffs would have on Michigan's substantial auto industry. She also asked for a longer grace period before certain changes to Medicaid under Republicans' new mammoth domestic policy law would take effect.
'I've always said that I'll work with anyone to get things done for Michigan. That's why I've continued to go to Washington, D.C. to make sure that Michiganders are front and center when critical decisions are being made,' Whitmer said in a statement to CNN. 'I will always do whatever I can to make life a little easier for Michiganders and strengthen our economy. We should do everything in our power to lower costs and grow more good-paying jobs in Michigan.'
Whitmer has an uncommonly amicable relationship with Trump for a Democratic governor, and she's used it to lobby for Michigan before — including by successfully pushing for additional fighter jets for the state's Selfridge Air National Guard Base. But it's still uncomfortable optics for Whitmer, as her party frequently excoriates Trump. That dynamic was famously illustrated in April, when the president invited the press into the Oval Office for an impromptu press conference and she hid her face behind a folder.
Contrast that with another Midwest Democrat, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who has traded insults with Trump in recent days after Pritzker invited Democratic lawmakers to his state who are resisting Republican attempts to redraw Texas' congressional maps.
During the meeting Tuesday, Whitmer particularly pressed Trump on Canada and Mexico tariffs that affect the auto industry, according to a readout from Whitmer's office. In April, Trump imposed 25% tariffs on imported cars and auto parts. Canada responded with 25% tariffs on US-made cars outside current existing trade agreements under USMCA.
'Michigan's economy is tied to the auto industry, and tariffs have a disproportionate impact on this industry. She also discussed economic opportunity in Genesee, with the best advanced manufacturing site in the country, and encouraged the president to work with her and other Michiganders on using this site to grow American jobs,' Whitmer's office said.
Specifically on Medicaid, Whitmer asked for a three-year transition period before certain funding changes to the Insurance Provider Assessment take full effect. Whitmer is concerned about a provision in the big, beautiful bill that will limit certain states' ability to levy taxes on providers, which also bring in more federal matching funds. States use the money to help pay for their share of Medicaid expansion and increase provider rates, among other things.
The limitation, which starts to take effect in October 2027 and phases down over five years, is expected to blow a hole in the budgets of many states. That includes Michigan, where provider taxes have a statewide impact of about $2.7 billion, according to the governor's office. Whitmer also asked for 'tighter collaboration with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to establish a framework that ensures provider assessments meet current policy,' according to her office.
Whitmer also saw Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and chief of staff Susie Wiles during her visit to the White House, according to her office.
Whitmer touted her prior bipartisan efforts with Trump in her Tuesday statement, adding that she appreciated 'the president's time and attention to the matters we discussed.' Trump had insisted on inviting Whitmer when he visited Selfridge Air National Guard Base in Michigan to announce the new fighter jets, crediting her for pushing for the planes. Whitmer 'has done a very good job' Trump said at the time.
Whitmer, who ended up briefly speaking alongside the president during the visit, said she was 'really damn happy' to be on hand for the announcement.
Tami Luhby, Elisabeth Buchwald and Chris Isidore contributed to this report.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

South Park Savages ICE and Kristi Noem, Sends Trump to Mar-a-Lago — Read Recap
South Park Savages ICE and Kristi Noem, Sends Trump to Mar-a-Lago — Read Recap

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

South Park Savages ICE and Kristi Noem, Sends Trump to Mar-a-Lago — Read Recap

Did you think South Park would take it easy on Donald Trump this week? Yeah, we didn't, either. In Wednesday's episode, Cartman is enraged when he sees Clyde start a debate podcast where he says terrible things about women and Jews. Hey, that's Cartman's thing! As Clyde explains to guidance counselor Mr. Mackey, 'I'm just trying to make my nut, man.' (DoorDash isn't free, you know.) But then P.C. Principal fires Mr. Mackey because the government is cutting back on 'unnecessary expenses,' and Mr. Mackey is left wondering: 'What about my nut?' More from TVLine The Chi's Yolanda Ross Breaks Down Her Heartbreaking Exit in the Season 7 Finale: 'We All Lost It' The Sandman's Finale Made Us Wish for a Death-Centric Spinoff: 'We Did Play With Those Ideas,' EP Says Dexter: Resurrection Recap: Dexter's Connection With Mia Takes a Shocking Turn Mackey goes to the bank to look at his finances, and it's grim: His nut is $8,000 a month. ('I had no idea my nut was that big.') He can't find a job as a counselor, so he has to work for ICE rounding up undocumented immigrants because they're the only ones hiring: 'We don't ask for experience!… We don't care if you've read a book!' Mackey goes to the recruitment center and is immediately hired, and they show him an orientation video starring Homeland Security head Kristi Noem, who shoots dogs dead when she's not locking up immigrants. (Oh, and she doesn't look great without makeup on.) While Cartman takes over Clyde's podcast and becomes a 'master debater,' sporting a Charlie Kirk haircut, Mackey is handed a machine gun and sent out on his first ICE raid… at a Dora the Explorer concert. He and the other ICE agents rush in and arrest dad and grandmas, even Dora herself. Noem is pleased — but her Botox falters, and her face melts like a hot candle. ICE's overreach leads to angry protests in Denver, where one protestor argues 'there are many Latinos in heaven.' So Noem sends her ICE agents to heaven to round up all the Hispanic angels: 'If it's brown, it goes down.' By now, though, her face falls completely off and scurries away. Mackey's making good money as an ICE agent, but as his income increases, so does his nut. Noem has good news, though: The President has invited Mackey to Mar-a-Lago to thank him personally. He's flown down to Trump's pleasure palace, where Trump emerges in a pristine white suit like Ricardo Montalban from Fantasy Island — while his VP J.D. Vance is reduced to playing the pint-sized Tattoo. Trump wants to promote Mackey to head of homeland security, he says. But what about Noem? 'Her face freaks me out,' Trump admits. Mackey gets cold feet, though, when Trump pulls him into a bedroom with Satan — yikes — and as he tries to escape, Mackey finds that Mar-a-Lago is just a house of horrors. Even fellow guest Clyde is disillusioned: 'Just wanted to make my nut, sir. Didn't really want all this.' Mackey understands, telling the kid: 'If you're doing something you don't really believe in just to make your nut, you're gonna find that you just get sadder, and your nut just gets bigger.' They decide to leave together, with the help of Superman's flying dog Krypto… well, until Noem takes out poor Krypto with a sniper rifle. But when her face crawls off and leaves the ICE agents scrambling to recover it, that gives Mackey and the immigrants enough time to escape. All's well that ends well, we guess. Got thoughts on this week's ? Drop 'em in a comment below. Best of TVLine Mrs. Maisel Flash-Forward List: All of Season 5's Futuristic Easter Eggs Yellowjackets Recap: The Morning After Yellowjackets Recap: The First Supper

Asian stocks climb, dollar droops on Fed easing bets
Asian stocks climb, dollar droops on Fed easing bets

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Asian stocks climb, dollar droops on Fed easing bets

By Kevin Buckland TOKYO (Reuters) -Asian equities rose on Thursday, with Japanese shares hitting a record high, as tech-led gains on Wall Street, upbeat earnings and growing expectations for U.S. rate cuts boosted sentiment. The prospect of a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin over the war in Ukraine also underpinned sentiment, benefitting the euro, while weighing on oil prices as traders gauged the outlook for sanctions on Moscow. Sterling held its ground at a one-week high going into the Bank of England's policy announcement later in the day, with a quarter-point cut widely expected, and the focus falling on a possible three-way split within the board. At the same time, markets largely shook off Trump's latest tariff threats, including an additional 25% tariff on India over purchases of Russian oil and a threatened 100% duty on chips. Japan's broad Topix index rose 0.9% to reach an all-time high, with the more tech-focused Nikkei also gaining by about the same margin. Taiwan's stock benchmark surged 2.3% to a more than one-year peak. South Korea's KOSPI added 0.6%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 0.4%, and mainland Chinese blue chips advanced 0.3%. Australian shares edged slightly lower after hitting a record high on Wednesday. U.S. stock futures were buoyant, with those for the S&P 500 up 0.3% and those for the Nasdaq also rising 0.3%. On Wednesday, the S&P 500 climbed 0.7% and the Nasdaq Composite jumped 1.2%. "Wall Street seems to have gotten its mojo back," analyst Kyle Rodda wrote in a note. "However, there are persistent risks to the downside. Downside surprises in official data are increasing," he said. "Valuations are also stretched, with forward price to earnings hovering around the highest in four years. And trade uncertainty persists." The U.S. dollar remained lower against major peers on Thursday, with expectations of easier policy from the Federal Reserve stoked both by some disappointing macroeconomic indicators - not least Friday's payrolls report - and Trump's move to install new picks on the Fed board that are likely to share the U.S. President's dovish views on monetary policy. Focus is centring on Trump's nomination to fill a coming vacancy on the Fed's Board of Governors and candidates for the next chair of the central bank, with current Chair Jerome Powell's tenure due to end in May. The dollar index, which gauges the currency against the euro, sterling and four other counterparts, gained slightly to 98.245, after dropping 0.6% on Wednesday. The euro was little changed at $1.1657, following the previous session's 0.7% jump. Sterling was steady at $1.3356. The BoE looks poised to cut interest rates for the fifth time in 12 months later on Thursday, but nagging worries about inflation are likely to split its policymakers and cloud the outlook for its next moves. Two Monetary Policy Committee members may push for a half-point rate cut, and two may lobby for no change. The dollar added 0.1% to 147.53 yen. Gold gained 0.4% to around $3,382 per ounce, buoyed by the weaker dollar. Crude oil clawed back some losses from Wednesday, when both Brent and West Texas Intermediate slid about 1%. Brent crude futures were last up 20 cents, or 0.3%, at $67.09 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude gained 22 cents, or 0.3%, to $64.57 a barrel. Sign in to access your portfolio

Sticker Mule partners with xAI to deploy Grok to 370 employees and millions of customers
Sticker Mule partners with xAI to deploy Grok to 370 employees and millions of customers

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Sticker Mule partners with xAI to deploy Grok to 370 employees and millions of customers

Sticker Mule partners with xAI to deploy Grok to 370 employees and millions of customers AMSTERDAM, N.Y., Aug. 06, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Sticker Mule will bring Grok to 370 employees and millions of customers worldwide. Implementation begins in August with Grok being deployed across all departments including engineering, marketing, finance, support and manufacturing. 'Everyone with an email at Sticker Mule is getting Grok, including many front line factory employees,' said Sticker Mule CEO, Anthony Constantino. 'We wanted to be among the first to implement Grok company-wide as we most trust xAI's capabilities.' The company will also begin implementing Grok-powered customer support and utilize Grok as its business brain to enhance decision-making. 'AI is going to beat up pure software businesses, but it will help innovators that sell physical products like Sticker Mule,' Constantino said. 'AI can't manufacture, but it will help innovators, like Sticker Mule, to reach feature parity with incumbent software platforms.' Sticker Mule recently entered the e-commerce market by launching Stores which has already helped sellers earn nearly $200,000 while in beta. Constantino expects AI to accelerate development of Stores and position it to challenge incumbents like Shopify. To supplement Stores, the company is also building a suite of business tools to further help its sellers including Give, an automated online giveaway platform, that was launched recently. Give automates giveaways to help sellers grow their Email and SMS marketing lists. Sticker Mule is also soon to release Notify, a full blown Email and SMS marketing platform that's in beta testing and other tools will follow. 'We believe, with xAI, we can likely double sales with minimal staff growth which will enable us to significantly improve compensation for our team and store sellers,' said Constantino. About Sticker Mule Sticker Mule is the best way to buy and sell custom merchandise, including stickers, t-shirts, magnets, buttons, labels, packaging, keychains, temporary tattoos, and an award-winning hot sauce. Founded in 2010, today we are powered by 1,200+ people in 30+ countries, with factories in New York, South Carolina and Italy. Press contact Paul Antonelli press@ A photo accompanying this announcement is available at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store