Business
Why Are Our Outbound Calls Getting Labeled “Spam Risk” Even Though We Have STIR/SHAKEN?
If your outbound calls are showing up as “Spam Risk” or “Scam Likely,” it can feel maddening when you have already done the “right” thing and implemented STIR/SHAKEN.
Here is the reality. STIR/SHAKEN is about caller ID authentication, not caller reputation. It helps carriers confirm whether a call is likely spoofed, but carriers still use reputation analytics and user feedback to decide whether a call should be labeled or blocked. Even platform providers like Twilio explicitly note that SHAKEN/STIR will not remove nuisance labeling.
This is why many teams reduce their dependence on cold outbound calling and shift more first contact to messaging. Tools like Meera, for example, can engage leads via SMS in a compliant way, qualify intent, and pass only serious prospects to your team, which reduces the call patterns that often trigger spam labels.
In this guide, we will break down what STIR/SHAKEN does, why calls still get flagged, and what you can do to fix labeling across carriers.
What STIR/SHAKEN Actually Solves and What It Does Not?
STIR/SHAKEN is a technology specifically designed to digitally authenticate calls as they pass through carrier networks and eliminate the risk of illegal robocalls and caller ID spoofing.
However, it is important to note that it doesn’t guarantee deliverability, answer rates, or a clean reputation score because carriers and call protection systems can still label and filter calls using their own analytics. AT&T, for example, explicitly distinguishes between “verified” indicators and calls marked as spam or fraud risk, and notes that spam risk calls may not receive verification indicators.
So if you are asking, “We have STIR/SHAKEN, why are we still being labeled?”, the most logical answer is that although you have authentication, your traffic still looks suspicious to carrier analytics, which causes it to be labeled.
What are the Most Common Reasons Legitimate Calls Still Get Labeled?
Carrier labeling systems do not rely on just one factor, but a mix of behavioral patterns, to determine whether a call appears trustworthy. This could be identity consistency, historical reputation, or even user feedback.
Businesses can follow all standard protocols, but still get flagged if the carrier system’s analytics pick up on any of these factors, and their calling activity unintentionally indicates spam-like behavior, which is why, before you look into technical solutions for this problem, it is important to understand what is the reason you’re getting labeled.
Here are some underlying issues you can address to resolve the problem:
Your calls have partial or weak attestation
Even in a STIR/SHAKEN world, calls can be signed with different attestation levels, commonly described as A, B, or C.
An A-level means the provider knows the customer and the caller ID is authorized, while lower levels indicate less certainty. If your traffic is frequently signed at B or C, carriers may still treat the calls as higher risk, especially when combined with other suspicious signals.
Your call patterns match spam behavior
Spam detection is heavily pattern-based. High call volume from one number in a short period, short call durations, and low answer rates can all look like robocall behavior, even when you are a legitimate business. This is especially common when teams use power dialers and rapidly cycle through lists.
Your number has a poor history or a lost reputation after porting
If your number was previously abused, or if it is newly activated with no history, it can get flagged more easily. Porting can also disrupt reputation signals between ecosystems and temporarily increase labeling risk.
Caller ID data is inconsistent or incomplete
Carrier analytics do not only look at signatures. They also look at whether the caller ID looks consistent and trustworthy. Mismatched caller name data and inconsistent presentation can contribute to suspicion.
End users and call protection apps are reporting you
User feedback matters. When recipients mark your calls as spam, it can influence your reputation, and many consumer protection products use network analytics and machine learning to identify spam patterns.
How to Diagnose the Real Cause of Labelling?
Here are some steps you need to follow to diagnose the real cause of labelling:
- Treat this like a funnel problem, not a telecom mystery.
- Look at what changed in the last 30 to 60 days. Did you increase calling volume too quickly? Did you start using new numbers? Did you port numbers? Did you change your outbound provider?
- Look at the signals carriers care about.
- Check your answer rate and average call duration. If a large portion of calls are going unanswered and the average duration is very short, your traffic can resemble nuisance calling.
- Verify your STIR/SHAKEN attestation level. If you are not consistently getting strong attestation, you may have an upstream configuration or identity problem.
What Actually Fixes “Spam Risk” Labeling?
There are various approaches to fix the “Spam Risk” labelling issue, and we have mentioned some of the most effective solutions below:
Improve identity consistency and attestation quality
Work with your voice provider to increase the likelihood of A-level attestation where possible and ensure caller ID data is consistent. The attestation levels exist specifically to express how confidently the caller ID can be trusted.
Adjust call patterns so they look human, not robotic
If you spin up a new number and immediately push heavy outbound volume, you often get flagged. Some providers explicitly recommend warming numbers and ramping volume gradually.
You also want to reduce behaviors that carriers interpret as nuisance calling, like repeated short-duration calls.
Monitor and remediate reputation, not just authentication
STIR/SHAKEN helps prove calls are not spoofed, but analytics and reputation still drive labeling decisions. This is a widely discussed issue in the industry, including by reputation-focused providers who stress that authentication alone does not solve labeling.
If your business relies heavily on outbound calls, proactive monitoring and remediation should be part of operations, not a one-time setup.
Consider branded calling and richer identity signals
Some carriers and industry discussions point to branded calling and richer caller identity data as an additional trust layer beyond basic authentication.
Best Tools to Reduce Cold Calling Reliance and Keep Leads Warm
A practical way to reduce spam labeling risk is to lower the volume of repeated outbound attempts and move early-stage qualification to channels that feel less intrusive.
Meera
If your team is calling lots of leads just to figure out who is serious, an SMS-first qualification layer can remove a huge amount of outbound call pressure. Meera is an AI texting platform that can respond instantly, qualify intent through two-way SMS conversations, and route warm prospects to your team when they are ready.
HubSpot workflows with messaging integrations
If your pipeline lives in a CRM like HubSpot, workflow automation combined with messaging integrations can help you respond quickly and keep follow-ups consistent, without requiring your team to personally manage every thread.
Twilio for custom messaging and call flows
If you want full control, Twilio provides programmable building blocks for SMS and calling. Twilio also notes that SHAKEN/STIR does not remove nuisance labels, which is a helpful reminder that deliverability requires more than authentication alone.
Plivo for Custom Messaging and Call Flows
If you want full control over your voice and messaging infrastructure, Plivo offers programmable APIs for SMS and outbound calling. It allows teams to build customized call flows, manage caller ID configuration, and integrate directly with internal systems. Like other programmable voice providers, it is important to remember that STIR/SHAKEN authentication does not automatically prevent spam labeling, since carrier analytics and reputation signals still influence call treatment.
Wrapping It Up
STIR/SHAKEN is necessary, but it is not a guarantee that carriers will stop labeling your calls. Carrier analytics, reputation signals, calling patterns, and user feedback still determine whether a call gets marked as Spam Risk.
The fix is usually a combination of stronger identity consistency, healthier call patterns, and reputation monitoring. And for many teams, the fastest relief comes from shifting early qualification to SMS so outbound calling is focused on warmer prospects instead of brute-force dialing.
Business
AUB Group H1 2026 slides: profit surges 14% despite stock decline

AUB Group H1 2026 slides: profit surges 14% despite stock decline
Business
Chocolate kept in anti-theft boxes as retailers warn it’s being stolen to order
The Heart of England Co-Op group, which runs 38 stores in the West Midlands, Warwickshire, Leicestershire and Northamptonshire, told the BBC chocolate theft cost it £250,000 last year. It was the group’s most stolen product in 2024 and topped only by alcohol in 2025, it said.
Business
D-Street up on bank, auto boost amid caution ahead of F&O expiry
The US Supreme Court ruled Trump’s tariffs illegal. In response, Trump imposed fresh duties – starting at 10% and then lifting them to 15% – on all countries. This is lower than the rates negotiated between New Delhi and Washington agreed upon earlier this month, but analysts fear the lower tariffs may not last for long.
“The 15% tariffs are limited to 150 days, and Trump will attempt to revert to earlier rates,” said Pankaj Pandey, head of Retail Research at ICICI Securities. “For now, China appears to be the biggest beneficiary, as it had faced the steepest rates earlier, which slightly dims prospects for other economies, including India.”
FPIs bought ₹3,483.7 crore worth of shares on Monday, while domestic institutions sold ₹1,292.24 crore. FPIs have purchased ₹17,426.3 crore so far in February. Across Asia, Hong Kong jumped 2.5%, while South Korea and Taiwan gained 0.7% and 0.5%. China and Japan were closed for holidays. In commodities, gold inched 0.9% higher, and silver rose 2.8% to $86.9. At home, the Nifty PSU Bank and Nifty Auto indices advanced 1.4% and 0.8%, while the Nifty IT index slipped 1.4%.
Technical analysts expect the downside to be limited to 25,500, but say broader participation is essential to sustain upside.
Business
Orbital space race heats up in Arctic north
We are visiting the Esrange Space Centre near the city of Kiruna, run by the Swedish Space Corporation (SSC Space), where more than 600 rockets have launched since the 1960s, mostly sub-orbital rockets used for scientific research, or to test-run space flights.
Business
Engineering Leadership in Modern Energy
Kwashie Senam Zilevu did not set out to work in oil and gas. He set out to solve problems.
Today, he is the Chief Technology Officer at Mizan Energy, where he leads digital transformation efforts across a global energy operation. His path from software engineer to technology executive reflects a steady focus on systems, discipline, and long-term thinking.
This spotlight looks at how Kwashie built his career, how he approaches leadership, and why his work sits at the intersection of technology and modern energy.
Early Life and Interest in Technology
Kwashie grew up in Alexandria, Virginia. From an early age, he showed a natural interest in how things work.
“I was always curious,” he says. “I liked taking systems apart, understanding the logic, and figuring out how to make them better.”
That curiosity extended beyond computers. He played soccer and learned the value of teamwork early. He also grew up in a family that valued education and technical excellence. His sibling, Setor Zilevu, would later become a recognized expert in artificial intelligence.
Seeing that path up close shaped Kwashie’s mindset.
“It made technology feel real,” he explains. “It wasn’t abstract. It was something you could build a life around.”
Education at Virginia Tech
Kwashie attended Virginia Tech, graduating in 2008. The experience sharpened both his technical skills and his work ethic.
“Virginia Tech taught me how to think under pressure,” he says. “You learn fast that clean code and clear logic matter.”
During this time, he focused on building a strong foundation rather than chasing trends. He spent hours refining fundamentals and learning how large systems interact.
That focus would later become central to his leadership style.
From Software Engineer to Technology Leader
After college, Kwashie began his career as a software engineer. He worked close to the code and close to real operational problems.
“I wanted to understand the ground level,” he says. “You can’t lead engineers if you’ve never sat where they sit.”
As his responsibilities grew, so did his scope. He moved from writing code to designing systems. From solving isolated problems to thinking about scale, risk, and reliability.
That progression eventually led him to Mizan Energy.
Driving Digital Transformation at Mizan Energy
As CTO of Mizan Energy, Kwashie now focuses on using technology to support complex energy operations. His work centers on efficiency, data integrity, and long-term system resilience.
“Energy is physical,” he says. “But the decisions behind it are digital.”
He views technology as an operational backbone, not a side project. Systems must be stable. Data must be trusted. Tools must support people, not slow them down.
“My job is to make technology invisible when it’s working,” he explains. “If teams can focus on operations, then the systems are doing their job.”
Leadership Philosophy in High-Stakes Industries
Kwashie’s leadership style is calm and methodical. He values clarity over speed and structure over noise.
“Good leadership is about consistency,” he says. “People need to know what to expect from you.”
He believes credibility is earned through decisions, not titles. That belief comes from his early engineering years.
“Engineers respect leaders who understand the work,” he adds. “You don’t need to know everything. But you need to know enough.”
In a high-stakes industry like energy, that mindset matters.
Life Outside the Office
Outside of work, Kwashie enjoys flying private planes, traveling, and reading. Aviation, in particular, reflects his personality.
“Flying teaches discipline,” he says. “You plan carefully. You respect systems. You stay humble.”
He still plays soccer and values the balance it brings.
“Sports remind you that progress is incremental,” he explains. “You train. You improve. You stay patient.”
Values and Philanthropy
Kwashie also remains committed to giving back through regular church-based donations. For him, success comes with responsibility.
“It’s important to stay grounded,” he says. “Giving keeps your perspective clear.”
That grounding influences how he leads and how he measures success.
Looking Ahead in Energy and Technology
Kwashie does not frame his work around hype. He focuses on durability.
“Trends come and go,” he says. “Strong systems last.”
As energy companies continue to rely on data, automation, and digital infrastructure, leaders like Kwashie play a critical role. His career shows how technical depth, steady leadership, and long-term thinking can shape complex industries.
“I’m still learning,” he says. “That’s the job.”
And for Kwashie Senam Zilevu, that mindset has made all the difference.
Business
Sebi chief Tuhin Kanta Pandey flags big PMS overhaul, to examine new RBI funding rules
On the PMS norms, Pandey said, “We propose to carry out a comprehensive review… so that the framework remains effective, adaptable, and aligned with evolving market dynamics.” The draft regulations will be released for public consultation before Sebi’s June board meeting, he added.
The PMS industry, which has about 2.15 lakh clients, managed Rs 10.5 lakh crore in assets (excluding EPFO and PF) as of January 31, 2026, growing at a 17% CAGR, according to Sebi data.
“But regulation alone cannot build a strong industry. The real strength of PMS will come from what firms do every day — in governance, suitability, technology and conduct,” Pandey said.
He stressed that investor suitability must remain central to the business model. “Risk profiling, suitability assessment, and client communication must be clear, consistent, and evidence‑based. Going ahead, PMS distributors conduct matters the industry must guard against mis‑selling,” he said.
New RBI funding norms
Separately, Pandey said Sebi would examine representations from stock brokers on the Reserve Bank of India’s new capital market funding norms. The RBI has proposed raising bank‑guarantee collateral requirements for proprietary traders to 100% from 50%.
“We have received a representation. I saw it on Friday. We will see what we can and need to do on it because RBI had initially opened draft guidelines and sought their opinion,” Pandey said. “It is in relation to issues around bank guarantees and how much collateral has to be given for proprietary trading. There are three to four issues. Since the representation has come to us, we will have a look at it.”
Speaking to the media after RBI’s board meeting in New Delhi, Governor Sanjay Malhotra said the central bank is not considering a review of the recently announced rules on bank financing of stock‑market intermediaries. The framework was finalised after due consultation, he said. “There is no change that we are contemplating.”
Under the new regulations, banks’ lending to brokers will face more scrutiny in terms of collateral requirements as well as purpose of the loan, while proprietary trading is seen taking the biggest hit
Oversight on grey‑market trading
Pandey said Sebi is working on a mechanism to introduce oversight on ‘to‑be‑listed’ stocks — a move aimed at grey‑market activity linked to upcoming IPOs.
“I think we have fairly deliberated this issue internally, and there is a possibility of such through the exchange mechanism for to‑be‑listed stocks — not the entire unlisted space, but the to‑be‑listed space where Sebi’s jurisdiction comes from the statute,” he said.
He added that Sebi would work out the operational details and issue a consultation paper in due course.
Senior Sebi employee suspended
Pandey also addressed the suspension of a general manager on Friday in connection with a “sensitive vigilance matter.” The regulator is contemplating disciplinary proceedings.
“The evidence was egregious enough for us to act,” Pandey said. “It is important that if there is any such case, we will get to the bottom of it.”
Business
ACV Auctions Q4 2025 slides: revenue growth continues amid profitability concerns

ACV Auctions Q4 2025 slides: revenue growth continues amid profitability concerns
Business
JPMorgan sees strong first-quarter growth in dealmaking, trading

JPMorgan sees strong first-quarter growth in dealmaking, trading
Business
Evaluating 7 Best Network Security Solution Providers
The cost of cyberattacks is rising rapidly as hackers develop increasingly destructive and sophisticated attacks. As a business leader, you should invest in a network security solution provider to combat this issue.
This guide will give you a solid framework for choosing a security provider.
What to Look for in a Network Security Solution Provider
Before examining providers, establish standard features of reliable providers. The following traits are worth considering.
Proactive Threat Detection
Traditionally, cybersecurity systems use historical data to combat threats, but this approach typically results in reactive rather than proactive action. To adopt a proactive approach, providers must use machine learning or AI to establish a baseline of regular activity so it can notify the team when abnormal activity occurs. This approach usually prevents attacks from escalating.
Comprehensive Visibility
The provider should allow for comprehensive visibility into your entire network, including cloud environments, IoT devices and on-premise servers. When you view all these systems, you can spot discrepancies and manage cybersecurity measures from a single place.
Ability to Grow Alongside the Company
As your company expands, your network security should grow with you. The one you choose should be able to handle a large influx of customers or increased system complexity. As you gain new equipment, the provider’s cybersecurity measures should adapt to protect those assets, as well.
Multiple Layers of Security
One layer of security is not enough to protect an entire network, so a good enterprise will establish multiple layers to safeguard your brand, like antivirus software or firewalls. A notable approach is adding a zero-trust layer, which protects different network areas based on a user’s position within the company.
Reliable Customer Support
A final attribute of a provider is reliable customer support. The business should respond promptly in the event of an emergency. The response time must be short, considering some support is time-sensitive. Its team should be dedicated to helping you stay alert to cybersecurity threats.
Best Network Security Solution Providers
After examining some common traits of good brands, the following are the best network security solution providers.
1. Darktrace
The best overall network security solution provider is Darktrace. It serves around 10,000 customers and uses its own AI-based cybersecurity approach. Darktrace AI learns and adapts to your company’s system and detects many cyberattacks, including AI-driven ones. The service identifies threats across the entire organization in real time.
Darktrace deploys autonomous responses to threats to deliver the fastest possible protection. It also protects the cloud, prioritizes security throughout all levels of your enterprise and gives you visibility across your entire domain. This option works with both large and small businesses to deliver robust cybersecurity.
2. Check Point
The security solutions provider Check Point uses four principles to establish cybersecurity, including security in hybrid mesh networks, workspaces, AI transformation and prevent-first. The provider has worked in security since 1994 and has a 99.9% prevention rate.
Check Point’s Infinity Platform provides a comprehensive view of your cybersecurity procedures. You can activate a demo to test its full capabilities. The website features multiple customer stories from around the world, reports, a Resource Center and a live threat map for early detection.
3. Palo Alto Networks
Another security provider is Palo Alto Networks, which utilizes an identity security approach. Its website features many demos and trials to test its products. This entity has a significant focus on AI, as it is one of the most pressing cybersecurity concerns. Palo Alto Networks uses a platform approach to cybersecurity, operating a Strata Network Security Platform powered by Precision AI.
The provider blocks around 30.9 billion in-line attacks per day. It has over 70,000 customers and uses a zero-trust policy. The website features multiple notable brands that use its platform, as well as the many awards it has won. Palo Alto Networks provides real-time cloud security and updates its data daily to remain informed.
4. Fortinet
The network security solution provider Fortinet hosts an annual conference called Accelerate that focuses on cybersecurity. It serves over 70,000 enterprises worldwide and practices high security assurance standards. The provider focuses on AI-driven security, utilizing its own FortiAI. It has multiple cybersecurity platforms, including FortiOS and Global Cloud Network.
Fortinet blocks around 360,000 malware executions a day. Its website showcases several case studies and customer videos to boost its credibility. It has several articles on its website about the latest innovations, as well.
5. Cisco
Another notable security provider is Cisco, which serves over a million customers, including many well-known entities. It utilizes AI Canvas for autonomous, AI-driven cybersecurity. Along with AI, it has a team of human employees who focus on hacker intent and security policies.
Cisco protects the cloud and its users with enhanced threat detection and response technology. It operates a hybrid mesh firewall and emphasizes zero-trust access and Cisco AI Defense for its clients.
6. Zscaler
The network security provider Zscaler uses an AI security platform with a zero-trust policy to protect your business. It reduces costs and complexity while accelerating cloud adoption. The provider helps you embrace AI securely, since improper usage brings about its own cybersecurity challenges.
Zscaler helps make your enterprise invisible to attackers by providing automated security operations. It also assesses your current data security posture and provides suggestions for improving it. The website features multiple customer success stories, as well.
7. AlgoSec
Utilizing the AlgoSec Horizon platform, AlgoSec provides an application-centric security management solution. The provider has served over 2,200 organizations since 2004. It works with many notable brands and provides coverage across your business’s entire estate.
AlgoSec is ideal for brands with employees working in hybrid environments, protecting systems across many devices and in multiple locations. It automates security changes to maintain continuous compliance. AlgoSec works well with data center and multi-cloud network security and offers an eBook on application security for your education.
Security Provider Comparison Table
The following table outlines each security provider’s key features for a quick comparison.
| Security Provider | Clients | Platform/AI | Security Visibility |
| Darktrace | 10,000 customers | Darktrace AI | Across domains |
| Check Point | Global outreach | Infinity Platform | Live threat map |
| Palo Alto Networks | 70,000 customers | Strata Network Security Platform | Real-time cloud security |
| Fortinet | 70,000 enterprises | FortiAI, FortiOS and Global Cloud Network | Worldwide |
| Cisco | One million customers | AI Canvas and Cisco AI Defense | Cloud and hybrid mesh firewall |
| Zscaler | Many customer success stories | AI security platform | Can see the current security posture and offer suggestions |
| AlgoSec | 2,200 organizations | AlgoSec Horizon | Across the entire estate |
Methodology for Choosing Security Providers
The security providers were chosen according to each’s key features, including customer outreach, platform or AI utilization, and its security visibility. The rankings were selected based on comparisons of key features and similar lists.
Find the Best Network Security Provider
It’s vital to invest in a reliable security partner that fits those needs. To find the best network security provider for your business, assess your own needs and consider the criteria outlined above.
Business
Rick Woldenberg says Supreme Court ruling against Trump tariffs is ‘not enough’
Learning Resources CEO Rick Woldenberg and MGA Entertainment CEO Isaac Larian discuss President Donald Trump’s global tariff strategy and the Supreme Court’s ruling on ‘The Claman Countdown.’
One of the plaintiffs in the Supreme Court case that challenged President Donald Trump’s tariff authority says Friday’s ruling against the president’s authority is “not enough.”
On Friday, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 against Trump’s tariffs. Later that day, however, Trump announced a 10% global tariff, which he later raised to 15% on Saturday.
One plaintiff, Illinois toymaker Rick Woldenberg, CEO of Learning Resources, called the ruling a “small improvement.” He joined the case against Trump’s tariffs after his toymaking company was adversely affected, as many of his toys are imported from China.
TRUMP RESPONDS TO SUPREME COURT RULING REJECTING SWEEPING TARIFFS POWERS: ‘A DISGRACE’

Woldenberg’s companies, Learning Resources Inc. and hand2mind Inc., sued in April to invalidate the tariffs as exceeding Trump’s authority. (Taylor Glascock/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)
“An asphyxiating tax is an economic depressant,” he told “The Claman Countdown” on Monday. “Federal plus state plus IEPA tariffs on our company last year exceeded our earnings. So, make a dollar pay, more than a dollar in taxes.”
Woldenberg argued that Trump’s tariff policy over the last year has hurt consumers and caused significant turmoil for his business.
He said his business faced a hard choice when dealing with the economic impacts of Trump’s tariffs.
“Either we’re gonna liquidate our business into the pockets of the federal government or we have to pass the costs on,” Woldenberg explained. “So, the tariff which falls on us becomes a regressive tax falling on the folks on the lower end of the economic spectrum.”
“I’m very uncomfortable with that. I think regressive tax is immoral,” he added.
The toymaker clarified that his case against Trump was not personal but rather a call for law and order.

President Trump’s emergency use of tariffs was ruled to be against his presidential authority in a 6-3 ruling on Friday. (Getty Images / Getty Images)
TRUMP REVEALS HIS ‘NEW HERO’ SUPREME COURT JUSTICE AFTER TARIFFS RULING
“We’re not for Mr. Trump or against Mr. Trump, we’re against the misapplication of law,” he told FOX Business.
Woldenberg will attend Trump’s State of the Union on Tuesday.
FOX Business host Liz Claman asked Woldenberg whether he thinks it will be awkward to see Trump in person after he called him and his fellow plaintiffs “sleazebags.”
SEN. JOHN KENNEDY SAYS ‘GRIZZLY’ TRUMP SECURED TRADE WINS DESPITE SCOTUS TARIFF BLOW
“I’m not embarrassed to be there – obviously don’t appreciate being called names,” he said.
MGA Entertainment CEO Isaac Larian also joined “The Claman Countdown” and said Trump’s push to bring back U.S. manufacturing through tariffs was “impractical.”
Larian, whose company manufactures Bratz dolls, said shifting production to the United States would make it impossible to maintain current price points for American consumers.

An employee works at a toy factory specializing in solar-powered plastic gadgets in Yiwu, China’s eastern Zhejiang province on April 11, 2025. (ADEK BERRY/AFP / Getty Images)
“This Bratz is right now a number one selling toy…” Larian said. “They are made in China right now, and they sell for $25. There is no way to make that in America and if it was, it would be $50 instead of $25.”
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
Larian also said Americans deserve to know whether they will get rebates tied to the tariff policy over the last year.
“The Supreme Court says these tariffs were illegal. If they’re illegal, they’re an illegal tax on Americans. And Americans deserve clarity on the refunds,” he said.
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