Trump
hits ‘pathetic’ Europe with 20 percent tariffs
European
Union joins China, Japan, Taiwan and Korea in U.S. President Donald Trump’s
trade sin bin.
April 2,
2025 11:00 pm CET
By Camille
Gijs and Douglas Busvine
https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-europe-trade-tariffs-imports-liberation-day/
President
Donald Trump dumped the European Union in the worst category of America’s trade
partners Wednesday, hitting the bloc with a 20 percent tariff on all imports.
Trump’s
“Liberation Day” announcement puts the 27-nation bloc in the trade sin bin
along with major economies like China, Japan, Taiwan and Korea. The move throws
up U.S. trade barriers that haven’t been this high since the Great Depression
of the 1930s.
Trump said
he was declaring a national emergency to impose a 10 percent tariff on imports
from all countries. Aside from that, he imposed individualized additional
tariffs on approximately 60 countries which he believes are the worst trade
offenders.
“For
decades, our country has been looted, pillaged, raped and plundered by nations
near and far, both friend and foe alike,” Trump said in the White House Rose
Garden.
“Now we’re
going to charge the European Union. They're very tough. Very, very tough
traders. You know, you think of the European Union, very friendly. They rip us
off. It's so sad to see. It's so pathetic,” Trump said.
“We are
going to charge them 20 percent,” the U.S. president said.
A White
House official said the 10 percent tariff would take effect early the morning
of April 5 and the additional tariff on the worst offenders on April 9.
In nobody’s
interest
Italian
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni was the first EU government leader to respond to
Trump’s tariff blow, calling it “wrong and not in the interest of either
party.”
“We will do
everything we can to work on an agreement with the United States with the aim
of averting a trade war that would inevitably weaken the West in favor of other
global players,” Meloni, who has hitherto enjoyed friendly relations with
Trump, said in a Facebook post.
The Trump
administration estimates the tariffs charged by the European Union to the
United States at 39 percent, and cuts this figure by half to come up with the
20 percent, in what Trump labelled “kind reciprocal” tariffs.
The Trump
administration took particular offense at what it views as the EU’s nontariff
barriers, such as value-added tax and its tech regulations. It factored these
into its calculations — although the Europeans flatly reject its view that
either discriminate against American businesses.
In fact,
over 70 percent of imports to the EU are duty-free. And, on a trade-weighted
basis, EU tariffs average just 2.7 percent, according to the World Trade
Organization.
Trump’s
tariff offensive came as a slap in the face of the European Union, which sought
to bring his administration to the negotiation table in the lead-up to
Wednesday’s announcement. EU trade chief Maroš Šefčovič went to Washington
twice to meet with his U.S. counterparts — to no avail.
The European
Commission said earlier it would respond in one strike to Trump’s reciprocal
tariffs and auto tariffs, in addition to its answer to U.S. steel and aluminum
duties already in force.
Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen responded in the early hours of Thursday, saying
that the bloc was "prepared to respond."
“There seems
to be no order in the disorder. No clear path through the complexity and chaos
that is being created, as all U.S. trading partners will be hit,” von der Leyen
said in a televised statement.
The new
“reciprocal” tariffs will not be stacked on top of the sectoral tariffs that
Trump has already announced for autos, steel and aluminum, and that are
expected for lumber, copper, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and potentially
critical minerals, White House officials said.
Giovanna
Faggionato contributed to this report.
This story
has been updated.
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