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President Donald Trump speaks during an event with auto racing champions at the South Portico of the White House Wednesday, April 9, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (AP) President Donald Trump speaks during an event with auto racing champions at the South Portico of the White House Wednesday, April 9, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (AP)

President Donald Trump speaks during an event with auto racing champions at the South Portico of the White House Wednesday, April 9, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (AP)

Amy Sherman
By Amy Sherman April 9, 2025

Flip flop: Trump said he wasn’t looking at pausing tariffs. Two days later, he did.

If Your Time is short

  • On April 7, a reporter asked President Donald Trump if he would be open to pausing tariffs to allow for negotiation. Trump said, "Well, we're not looking at that."

  • White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said April 7 that the idea that Trump was going to issue a 90-day pause was "fake news." 

  • On April 9, Trump announced a 90-day pause on some tariffs, lowering the amount for all partners to 10%. He excluded China.

In a reversal of the plan he defended for days, President Donald Trump delayed almost all of the country-by-country tariffs he unveiled April 2.

For two days, Trump and the White House denied that he was considering a pause of the tariff plan shaking global markets.

During an April 7 Oval Office event with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a reporter asked Trump, "Would you be open to a pause in tariffs to allow for negotiation?"

"Well, we're not looking at that," Trump said. "We have many, many countries that are coming to negotiate deals with us, and they're going to be fair deals. And in certain cases, they're going to be paying substantial tariffs. They'll be fair deals."

On April 9 — hours after he told everyone to "BE COOL!" — Trump changed course. "I have authorized a 90 day PAUSE, and a substantially lowered Reciprocal Tariff during this period, of 10%, also effective immediately," Trump posted on Truth Social. "Thank you for your attention to this matter!"

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He made an exception for China, raising its tariff to 125%.

PolitiFact uses a Flip-O-Meter to measure politicians’ consistency on issues. The rating is not making a value judgment about a politician who changes positions on an issue. Some people say changing positions shows inconsistent principles; others say it shows pragmatism and willingness to compromise given new information.

Tariffs are a tax on imported goods that businesses pay. Their cost is often passed on to consumers through higher prices.

The Trump administration has said that by raising revenue through tariffs, other federal taxes could be cut. But economists have said it’s unlikely high tariffs could generate enough revenue to result in meaningful tax reductions for typical Americans. 

Trump and the White House initially said he would not pause tariffs 

On the morning of April 7, X accounts amplified a significant exaggeration of a noncommittal response from National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett responding to the possibility of a 90-day tariff pause. CNBC anchors repeated the unconfirmed information and later aired a correction.

Trump on April 7 shared a clip of Fox News host Maria Bartiromo saying earlier that morning, "Rates are plummeting, oil prices are plummeting, deregulation is happening. ... President Trump is not going to bend."

The White House held Trump’s line; its"Rapid Response 47" X account said reports that Trump was expected to issue a 90-day pause were "fake news." White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told CNBC the same thing.

During an April 8 White House press briefing, a reporter asked Leavitt if Trump was considering holding off on imposing some tariffs or reversing them due to negotiations with other countries.

"The president was asked and answered this yesterday," Leavitt said. "He said he is not considering an extension or delay. I spoke to him before this briefing, that was not his mindset. He expects that these tariffs are going to go into effect."

The U.S. stock market had tumultuous days and losses amid Trump’s announced tariffs. 

‘They were getting yippy’: How Trump explained his changed position

Trump’s Truth Social announcement about a pause for most tariffs came shortly after 1 p.m. ET on April 9. He said more than 75 countries had called federal officials to negotiate a solution and had not retaliated, except for China.

A few hours later at an event with auto racers, a reporter asked Trump to explain his thinking. Trump said: "Well, I thought that people were jumping a little bit out of line, they were getting yippy, you know they were getting a little bit yippy, a little bit afraid."

Responding to another question about the pause, Trump said, "I think in financial markets, because they change. Look how much it changed today. We went from, you know, pretty moderate today, but over the last few days, it looked pretty glum to, I guess they say it was the biggest day in financial history."

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Even after the 9.5% increase in the S&P 500 market index on April 9, the metric was still down nearly 11% since its peak under Trump on Feb. 19, wiping away all gains since early September 2024, under both Trump and his predecessor, Joe Biden.

A reporter noted how Trump went from no pause to a pause in two days.

Trump said: "You have to have flexibility. I could say, here’s a wall and I’m gonna go through that wall. I’m gonna go through it no matter what. Keep going and you can’t go through the wall. Sometimes you have to be able to go under the wall, around the wall, or over the wall. These guys know that better than anybody, right? You got to go around them sometimes, you’re not gonna go through them."

Trump said he was thinking about a pause "over the last few days" as he was talking with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. "I think it probably came together early this morning, fairly early this morning, just wrote it up," Trump said. 

Our ruling

On April 7, a reporter asked Trump if he would be open to a pause to his country-by-country tariffs to allow for negotiation, and he replied, "Well, we're not looking at that." The White House said that social posts suggesting that Trump was considering a 90-day pause were "fake news."

But two days later Trump authorized a 90-day pause on the country-by-country tariffs. He said this decision came after several nations told the administration that they were willing to negotiate. 

When asked by a reporter about the pause, Trump said people were "jumping a little bit out of line, they were getting yippy."

Our definition of a Full Flop is a complete change in position. That’s what Trump did here. We rate Trump’s change of position a Full Flop.

PolitiFact Staff Writers Loreben Tuquero and Madison Czopek and Chief Correspondent Louis Jacobson contributed to this fact-check.

RELATED: Did Trump impose ‘the largest tax hike in our lifetime’? How it compares, as it’s currently proposed

RELATED: Karoline Leavitt says tariffs are ‘a tax cut.’ Economists say they aren’t

Our Sources

Factbase, Remarks: Donald Trump Holds a Bilat with Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, April 7, 2025

White House Rapid Response 47, X post, April 7, 2025

President Donald Trump, Truth Social post, April 7, 2025

President Donald Trump, Truth Social post, April 9, 2025

C-SPAN, White House daily briefing, April 8, 2025

Reuters, S&P 500 hits lowest close in almost a year as hopes wane for tariff concessions, April 8, 2025

Yahoo finance, S&P 500, April 9, 2025

PolitiFact, Trump official didn’t confirm a tariff pause, but markets rallied amid false headlines, April 8, 2025

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More by Amy Sherman

Flip flop: Trump said he wasn’t looking at pausing tariffs. Two days later, he did.

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