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EU races to finalise US trade deal to avoid more Trump tariffs

Richard Bravo / Bloomberg
Richard Bravo / Bloomberg • 3 min read
EU races to finalise US trade deal to avoid more Trump tariffs
The disagreement threatens to send transatlantic relations to a new low and could trigger a fresh round of tariff escalation between the allies.
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(May 19): European Union (EU) officials will meet on Tuesday in an effort to finalise legislation for the bloc’s trade deal with the US. Failure to reach an agreement means the EU risks missing US President Donald Trump’s July 4 deadline to have the accord in place.

Trump previously threatened to hike tariffs on European auto imports to 25% from 15% because the EU hadn’t moved quickly enough to implement the deal, which was signed nearly a year ago.

The disagreement threatens to send transatlantic relations to a new low and could trigger a fresh round of tariff escalation between the allies. The European Commission, which handles trade matters for the EU, has said it maintains options to protect the bloc’s interests if Trump were to follow through on his threat to boost levies.

Trump set the July deadline after speaking with European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen. “I agreed to give her until our country’s 250th birthday or, unfortunately, their tariffs would immediately jump to much higher levels,” the US president posted on social media earlier this month.

The European Parliament has repeatedly blocked ratifying the agreement after the US Supreme Court struck down Trump’s use of an emergency-powers law to impose global tariffs and after the American president threatened to annex Greenland, a semi-autonomous territory of EU member Denmark.

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Under the trade deal — which was signed in July — the EU agreed to erase levies on US industrial goods in exchange for a 15% tariff ceiling on most EU products. Officials in the EU say the US hasn’t complied with all the requirements in the accord, pointing to the fact that Washington widened a 50% tariff on European steel and aluminium in August to include hundreds of new products.

The US has implemented certain provisions of the deal, capping tariffs on many EU exports at the agreed 15% level.

Parliament finally approved the deal but added multiple amendments to the legislation. Those include a stipulation that the agreement won’t be implemented until the US honours its commitments and a March 2028 expiration date, unless both sides agreed to an extension.

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A landing zone could be a later date and provisions that would see the EU retaliate if circumstances change.

A final version of the bill must be agreed by Parliament, the commission and the European Council, which represents the EU’s 28 member states. Once the three institutions agree on the language, it will need to be voted on.

Trump has repeatedly used the threat of tariffs to pressure countries to offer concessions. Some of those threats have been followed by swift retreats, due to challenges implementing the levies, economic concerns about them or US trading partners’ efforts to address Trump’s objections.

“This latest move demonstrates just how unreliable the US side is,” European Parliament’s Bernd Lange said in comments to Bloomberg News earlier this month. “This is no way to treat close partners.”

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