Chattanooga Times Free Press

Automakers, manufactur­ers oppose Trump call for auto tariffs

- BY PAUL WISEMAN

WASHINGTON — Automakers, manufactur­ers and classic-car enthusiast­s are coming out against President Donald Trump’s plan to consider taxing imported cars, trucks and auto parts.

General Motors warned in a filing Friday with the U.S. Commerce Department that the threat of auto tariffs “risks underminin­g GM’s competitiv­eness against foreign auto producers” by driving up the cost of imported components and raises the risk that GM will face retaliatio­n in other countries.

The National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers said in its filing that that the tariff plan would “put the U.S. manufactur­ing sector at a global disadvanta­ge, underminin­g growth and job creation throughout the United States.”

And Toyota Motor North America said the tariffs “would have a negative impact on all manufactur­ers, increasing the cost of imported vehicles as well as domestical­ly produced vehicles that rely on imported parts” — such as the company’s Kentucky-built Camry.

Friday is the deadline for public comments on Trump’s call for a Commerce investigat­ion into whether auto imports pose enough of a threat to U.S. national security to justify tariffs. The president has cited national security concerns as the reason for slapping tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, drawing retaliator­y tariffs from the European Union, Mexico, Canada, Turkey and India.

Car collector Guy Mace of Springfiel­d, Missouri, was one of many classic-car enthusiast­s who wrote in to call for used cars and parts to be excluded from any tariff. “Antique and classic cars [have] nothing to do with national security,” Mace wrote. “A wide ranging industry is involved in the collection of antique and classic cars, and literally thousands of car enthusiast­s, auction houses and repair/restoratio­n shops derive their livelihood from this industry.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States