
Can Rubio's Asia tour ease anxiety over US tariffs or is it just ‘short-term gimmickry'?
Southeast Asia , which is bracing itself for the return of steep US tariffs that threaten to derail growth and test ties with Washington.
Rubio is expected to fly to Kuala Lumpur for meetings on July 10-11 with foreign ministers from the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) and other Asia-Pacific countries, according to media reports.
He reportedly cancelled plans to head to Japan and South Korea to attend to a visit to Washington by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday to discuss an end to the war in Gaza.
The Asia trip will mark the highest-level visit to the region by a US official since President
Donald Trump returned to office in January – but expectations remain low for any immediate economic reprieve.
US President Donald Trump has said he is 'not thinking about the pause' in tariffs. Photo: TNS
Trump first announced his sweeping 'Liberation Day' tariffs on April 2, imposing up to 50 per cent duties on imports from certain countries. A 90-day pause was granted to allow for negotiations, but is set to expire on July 9.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
28 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
US House passes Trump policy bill, which will head to White House for president's signature
The US House of Representatives passed a massive tax-and-spending bill on Thursday that President Donald Trump has sought since returning to the White House, an initiative that fundamentally revamps government spending and jeopardises dozens of planned clean energy projects with ties to China. Passing in a 218 to 214 vote, the sprawling One Big Beautiful Bill Act – which would lock in Trump's priorities on border and defence financing, and make permanent tax cuts that Congress passed at Trump's behest during his first term in 2017 – is the most significant legislative win of his second term so far. The final vote in the House followed a session that ran through the night on bringing the legislation to the floor, ending months of wrangling on Capitol Hill. The bill faced resistance from all Democratic lawmakers as well as different factions of the Republican Party over its deep cuts to Medicaid, the healthcare programme which roughly 70 million low-income, elderly and disabled Americans depend on, and its hikes in federal spending. On the latter, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office projected recently that the bill would add at least US$3 trillion to the federal deficit over the next decade. That prompted a handful of Republican representatives to hold out during the marathon procedural session before giving way; in the end, only Representative Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania voted no, joining every House Democrat, with the House voting 219-213 to bring the bill to the floor. Trump, who had been helping House Speaker Mike Johnson press the holdouts on Wednesday, intensified his pressure on them in a series of increasingly strident posts. 'RIDICULOUS!!!' he said in one sent shortly after midnight as the bill was in limbo. House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York (left) speaking in the House chamber early Thursday morning before the final vote for President Donald Trump's signature bill of tax breaks and spending cuts. Photo: AP Earlier in the week, Senate Republicans also wrestled over Medicaid, food stamps, green energy credits and rural hospital funding. The chamber passed the same bill on Tuesday 51-50, with Vice-President J.D. Vance casting the tiebreaking vote.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Putin and Trump speak, as US halts some arms shipments to Ukraine
US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed Iran, Ukraine and other issues by phone on Thursday, the Kremlin said, in their sixth publicly disclosed chat since Trump returned to the White House. Advertisement While discussing the situation around Iran, Putin emphasised the need to resolve all issues by political and diplomatic means, said Yuri Ushakov, his foreign affairs adviser. The United States struck three sites in Iran on June 22, inserting itself into Israel's war aimed at destroying Tehran's nuclear programme. On the conflict in Ukraine, Ushakov said Trump emphasised his push for a quick halt to the fighting, and Putin voiced Moscow's readiness to pursue talks with Kyiv. At the same time, the Russian leader emphasised that Moscow will seek to achieve its goals in Ukraine and remove the 'root causes' of the conflict, Ushakov said. Advertisement Putin has argued he sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022 to fend off a threat to Russia posed by Ukraine's push to join Nato and protect Russian speakers in Ukraine – arguments rejected by Kyiv and its allies. He insisted that any prospective peace deal must see Ukraine abandon its Nato bid and recognise Russia's territorial gains.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
National security offenders to be disqualified from Hong Kong's Legco elections
Hong Kong authorities have proposed disqualifying anyone convicted of offences endangering national security from being nominated to run in a Legislative Council election or serving as a lawmaker. Advertisement The Electoral Affairs Commission said a public consultation for the proposed guidelines, which include several changes related to national security, was launched on Thursday and would wrap up on August 1. The proposals were shared months before the next Legco election on December 7, the second to be held since the process was overhauled to follow a 'patriots only' system. The changes include the disqualification of anyone convicted of offences that endanger national security from being nominated or elected as a lawmaker, in adherence to the city's existing national security legislation Members of the Election Committee who are convicted of the same offences are also barred from voting in the polls for the Election Committee constituency. Advertisement Election candidates will also be prohibited from sending by mail any publications that constitute a national security risk.