Home Exclusive EXCLUSIVE: Trump Advisers Took Advantage of Navarro’s Absence to Push for Tariff...

EXCLUSIVE: Trump Advisers Took Advantage of Navarro’s Absence to Push for Tariff Pause

Peter Navarro (AP Photo/Paul Sancya, File)

By Alexander Saeedy and Josh Dawsey

They needed to get the president alone.

On April 9, financial markets were going haywire. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick wanted President Trump to put a pause on his aggressive global tariff plan. But there was a big obstacle: Peter Navarro, Trump’s tariff-loving trade adviser, who was constantly hovering around the Oval Office.

Navarro isn’t one to back down during policy debates and had stridently urged Trump to keep tariffs in place, even as corporate chieftains and other advisers urged him to relent. And Navarro had been regularly around the Oval Office since Trump’s “Liberation Day” event.

Faith Based Events

So that morning, when Navarro was scheduled to meet with economic adviser Kevin Hassett in a different part of the White House, Bessent and Lutnick made their move, according to multiple people familiar with the intervention.

They rushed to the Oval Office to see Trump and propose a pause on some of the tariffs—without Navarro there to argue or push back. They knew they had a tight window. The meeting with Bessent and Lutnick wasn’t on Trump’s schedule.

The two men convinced Trump of the strategy to pause some of the tariffs and to announce it immediately to calm the markets. They stayed until Trump tapped out a Truth Social post, which surprised Navarro, according to one of the people familiar with the episode. Bessent and press secretary Karoline Leavitt almost immediately went to the cameras outside the White House to make a public announcement.

“We needed everyone singing from the same song sheet,” a person familiar with the matter said.

The stock market had cratered after some of Trump’s tariffs started to go into effect on April 2. The next week, an even more troubling sign had emerged: a selloff in Treasury bonds, normally a safe haven when markets are turbulent.

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