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Johnson, the US House Speaker, believes that White House is considering exemptions from reciprocal tariffs

Mike Johnson, Republican Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, said Wednesday that he believed President Donald Trump was considering exemptions from reciprocal tariffs for industries such as automobiles and pharmaceuticals.

Sources briefed on discussions say that Trump informed Republicans at a White House gathering last week that he is considering four exemptions from the reciprocal tariffs. These include imported automobiles and pharmaceuticals.

Johnson, in a short interview, said: "I believe the White House has a few categories which would be treated differently. I would expect that those two would also be included." "But I'm unsure." "You have to wait and ask the White House."

The White House didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comment.

Trump's advisers were busy on Wednesday preparing plans for the reciprocal duties that the U.S. President has promised to impose against every country which imposes tariffs on U.S. imported goods. This increased fears of an expanding global trade war, and the threat to accelerate inflation.

It would be a nuanced way to deploy tariffs, as opposed to the sweeping tariffs that Trump has repeatedly threatened. (Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw, David Morgan and Scott Malone; Editing by Scott Malone).

(source: Reuters)