EU
leaders try to out-bully Trump, floating world trade club without US
Ursula von
der Leyen suggests EU could join forces with the Asian-Pacific trade bloc as
Europe tries to up its game.
June 27,
2025 3:23 am CET
By Tim Ross,
Camille Gijs, Gabriel Gavin and Clea Caulcutt
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-leaders-donald-trump-us-trade-tariffs-ursula-von-der-leyen/
BRUSSELS —
Late at night, after a dinner of dumplings and duck legs, the European Union’s
leadership excitedly revealed a new plan to combat the hell-raising American
president’s trade war: Take him on at his own wild game.
For six
months, Donald Trump has upended the global trading order, threatening and
announcing tariffs, then easing them to open negotiations, while warning that
punitive levies will be reimposed if the terms are not to his liking.
With just 13
days until the Trump-imposed deadline to conclude a EU-U.S. deal, European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen decided the time for conventional
negotiating tactics was over.
She floated
the idea that the EU’s 27 countries could join forces with 12 members of the
Asian-led Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership
bloc (CPTPP) — which now includes the U.K. — to form a new world trade
initiative.
The new
grouping would redesign a rules-based global trading order, reforming or
perhaps even replacing the now largely defunct World Trade Organization, she
said.
Crucially,
the U.S. would not automatically be invited.
Such a plan
would “show to the world that free trade with a large number of countries is
possible on a rules-based foundation,” von der Leyen said at the end of the EU
leaders’ summit in Brussels in the early hours of Friday morning. “This is a
project where I think we should really engage on, because CPTPP and the
European Union is mighty.”
Von der
Leyen then explained that it would be up to the EU and the CPTPP to decide
whether the U.S. would be allowed to join their project. “As far as I
understand, the Americans left at a certain point.”
Innovative
and unpredictable
The idea of
more formal cooperation with the Indo-Pacific group had already been floated in
recent months by the EU executive as a way to counter Trump’s tariffs. But in
case there was any doubt that such a gambit was firmly tied to fighting back
against Trump’s disruption, another man called Donald dispelled it.
Polish Prime
Minister Donald Tusk revealed the bloc had to be “very innovative … sometimes
maybe unpredictable — as our friends from the other side of Atlantic.”
Poland
currently holds the six-month rotating presidency of the Council of the EU. And
Tusk, a former European Council president, is a veteran of Brexit negotiations,
having chaired late-night summits in Brussels in an attempt to get a deal with
the U.K. on its divorce from the bloc. He couldn't resist crowing about giving
Trump a taste of his own medicine.
“I think all
of us are aware about this new method how to negotiate and how to talk about
trade and other communications,” Tusk said, clearly referring to Trump’s
disruptive tactics. The U.S. is one of Europe’s closest partners, he noted,
“but we need to be similar to our partners in some sense.”
Von der
Leyen's idea won public endorsement from Europe’s most powerful leader, German
Chancellor Friedrich Merz. “If the WTO is as dysfunctional as it has been for
years and apparently remains so, then we, who continue to consider free trade
important, must come up with something else,” he said.
But the
truth is, von der Leyen’s proposal may ultimately prove only a temporary
distraction from what threatens to be a major defeat, when an agreement with
Trump is finally unveiled.
At the
summit, European leaders grimly digested the news of a fresh proposal from the
U.S. for further negotiations, POLITICO was first to reveal.
As they sat
around the dinner table and accepted they won’t get a great agreement from
Trump, they asked each other just how bad a deal they would be prepared to take
to avoid the worst of his tariffs.
Von der
Leyen and her team are now expected to negotiate a sketchy outline of a
contract in the next few days to meet Trump’s deadline of agreeing terms by
July 9. After that date, he has threatened to ramp up punitive tariffs on EU
goods to as high as 50 percent.
Only a month
ago, EU countries were bullish about pushing Trump to back down in his trade
war. They scorned the outline agreement the U.S. president struck with U.K.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer, insisting the bloc was a trading superpower and
would never accept Trump’s baseline 10 percent tariff.
Now, all
that has changed. “It would be best to have the lowest tariff possible, 0
percent is the best,” said French President Emmanuel Macron. “But if it's 10
percent, it’ll be 10 percent."
Lithuania’s
President Gitanas Nausėda told POLITICO the EU can at most “hope to be treated
like the United Kingdom” when it comes to a trade agreement with the U.S.
“It would
probably be the best scenario,” Nausėda said. “But the United Kingdom, in the
eyes of the United States, it’s a little bit different as a partner. And I hope
we will be treated like the United Kingdom — but we will see.”
Diplomats
said the question facing EU leaders was whether to go for a quick deal in the
next two weeks or wait for a better one, even if it means a protracted trade
war with the U.S.
The risk in
that situation would be that Trump then revisits his commitments to European
defense, asking why Americans should pay to protect countries that are fighting
them on trade, one diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity because
the matter is sensitive.
Germany’s
Merz was the strongest voice in favor of a rapid deal, even if it is only an
outline. "We now have less than two weeks until July 9. And you can't
agree a sophisticated trade agreement there," he said. Industries from
chemicals, to steel, to car-making are already suffering, he said, putting
companies at risk. “Please let's find a solution quickly.”
Hans von der
Burchard, Jacopo Barigazzi, Yurii Stasiuk, Ben Munster, Gregorio Sorgi, Hugo
Murphy, Louise Guillot, Nicholas Vinocur, Sarah Wheaton, Max Griera and
Alexander Varbanov contributed reporting.

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