Trump
vows to launch trade war on EU
“The
European Union has treated us so terribly,” U.S. president complains, as Canada
and Mexico get nailed with blitz of tariffs.
February 1,
2025 12:37 am CET
By Seb
Starcevic and Giselle Ruhiyyih Ewing
https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-trade-war-eu-tariffs-mexico-canada/
A massive
trade war looms after U.S. President Donald Trump announced Friday evening he
will “absolutely” slap tariffs on goods from the EU.
“Am I going
to impose tariffs on the European Union? Do you want the truthful answer or
should I give you a political answer? Absolutely, absolutely,” he told
reporters in the Oval Office.
“The
European Union has treated us so terribly,” Trump added, reiterating a
grievance he has frequently voiced.
Trump has
threatened to start a trade war with the EU in recent months, posting on social
media in December that unless the bloc buys more American oil and gas, it would
be “TARIFFS all the way!!!”
However, his
remarks Friday were the first time he confirmed as much. He did not say exactly
what the tariffs would be or on what specific goods they would be imposed, but
said he plans on “doing something substantial.”
During his
first term, Trump imposed tariffs of 25 percent on steel imports and 10 percent
on aluminum imports from the EU, Canada and Mexico, sparking a trade war with
the bloc, which hit back with tariffs on American goods including whiskey,
motorcycles and denim, worth around $6 billion.
The European
Commission has said it is ready to retaliate again if Trump levies tariffs this
time around.
The EU
exported $576.3 billion worth of goods — nearly 20 percent of its total exports
— to the U.S. in 2023, according to U.S. Census Bureau data, making America the
bloc's second-largest trading partner.
Trump on
Friday also announced 25 percent tariffs on goods from neighboring Canada and
Mexico, and 10 percent on imports from key trade partner China, which he said
would go into effect on Saturday.
Top EU
officials have taken Trump’s threats to heart, as they mull how best to
respond. Just two days after the U.S. president’s inauguration, the bloc's
trade chief Maroš Šefčovič told POLITICO that Brussels is “ready to engage”
with its American partner.
But any
desire — by any country or bloc — to engage cooperatively on global trade isn't
always reciprocated by the bellicose U.S. leader.
Trump has
repeatedly wielded threats of tariffs to get his way, showing no hesitation
about igniting trade wars in the process. Mexico and Canada got whacked, with
Trump citing concerns about illegal immigration, fentanyl and trade deficits as
reasons for the move.
Last
weekend, Trump claimed a win after strong-arming the Colombian government into
accepting deportation flights of migrants out of the U.S. by threatening to
slap the country with an emergency 25 percent tariff on all imported goods.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the "events make clear
to the world that America is respected again."
In his last
administration, Trump imposed significant tariffs on Chinese goods, prompting
the government of China to retaliate in kind, wreaking havoc on American
farmers.
This story
has been updated.

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