Baltimore Sun

Auto tariffs Trump used for political mileage coming due

- By Jenny Leonard

Car dealer Jim Smail in Greensburg, Pa., voted for Donald Trumpin201­6 because he wanted a businessma­n in the White House. The U.S. president’s trade wars have changed his mind.

“I’ve learned my lesson,” says the president of Smail Auto Group, which sells U.S.- and foreign-made vehicles. “I thought that’s what we needed and I got what I didn’t expect, that’s for sure.”

The next chapter in Trump’s effort to rewrite American trade policy may be delivered early next week, and it could be the most disruptive. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross is set to conclude an investigat­ion examining the national-security risk of auto imports by Sunday. He’ll formally submit the report to the president and offer recommenda­tions on what actions to take.

Trump will have 90 days to decide what to do next. He could also further delay his decision to give countries more time to negotiate with the U.S.

The president has already publicly threatened to impose tariffs of as much as 25 percent on automobile­s and parts. The move is particular­ly focused on fixing what he says is an unfair trading relationsh­ip with the European Union. Trump last year used the same arcane trade law — Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 — to justify tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.

Smail’s dealership­s sell American, Korean, Japanese and German-made cars. It’s hard to say how the potential tariffs would affect his business because there are no details yet, he says. What is certain: A trade war with cars in the crossfire would hurt his sales and lead to layoffs.

“I look at tariffs as a cost to the consumer,” Smail says. “I don’t understand how anybody with economic advisers around him is so uninformed” about the effects of this plan, he says of Trump.

The Center for Automotive Research, based in Ann Arbor, Mich., estimates that a 25 percent tariff applied to imports from around the world would result in $66.5 billion total loss in revenue for dealership­s and 117,500 total jobs lost.

Many of Trump’s advisers have argued that the threatened auto tariffs are merely a negotiatin­g tool used to gain leverage in bilateral talks with the EU, Japan and other trading partners.

Sweeping auto duties have very few fans, even within the Trump administra­tion. U.S. Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer has been arguing in White House meetings that the focus should be America’s trading relationsh­ip with China and that auto duties were a distractio­n, according to people familiar with internal deliberati­ons.

Auto manufactur­ers for months have been telling U.S. lawmakers and the administra­tion of the potentiall­y calamitous consequenc­es of tariffs and the inevitable retaliatio­n. Still, not all dealers share Smail’s opposition to Trump’s strategy.

“One thing we have in common is we’re all hoping this is just part of the negotiatin­g tactic,” says Bob Hager, chief operating officer and partner at Ourisman Automotive Group in northern Virginia. “If you’re in negotiatio­ns with a foreign entity on fair trade, they certainly can’t sense that you won’t enact tariffs.”

The optimism and willingnes­s to stick with Trump in part stems from dealers’ historic political support for the GOP.

In the 2018 midterm elections, auto dealers gave 82 percent of their $12.2 million in federal political contributi­ons to Republican­s, according to data from the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisa­n group that studies money in politics. Since 1989, auto dealers have given 78 percent of their $143.8 million in federal political contributi­ons to Republican­s, the center’s data show.

But the prospect of levies on car imports could emerge as a red line for Congress and a rare showing of agreement between Democrats and Republican­s.

As the deadline for the Commerce report approaches, bipartisan legislatio­n aimed at limiting the president’s tariff powers has been introduced in the Senate and House.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP ??
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP

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