The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Perdue urges Trump to alter tariff proposal

Economy needs room to breathe first, senator says.

- By Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com

WASHINGTON — Some of Georgia’s top Republican lawmakers are pushing back against Donald Trump’s proposal to impose steep tariffs on foreign-made steel and aluminum, including one of the president’s most prominent backers in the state.

U.S. Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., said he met privately with White House Chief of Staff John Kelly on Tuesday morning to urge the administra­tion to adopt “a more targeted approach” to the tariffs.

“The president’s instincts are right that we need access in these markets,” Perdue told reporters in the afternoon. “But (tariffs) need to be very targeted.”

Republican­s on Capitol Hill, including House Speaker Paul Ryan, have scrambled in recent days to persuade Trump to change course on the proposed tariffs. They argue the previously announced 25 percent tax on foreign steel and 10 percent tax on aluminum could prompt trade wars and negate the economic effects of the party’s recently passed tax overhaul.

“What we are encouragin­g the administra­tion to do is to focus on what is clearly a legitimate problem and to be more surgical in its approach, so we can go after the true abusers without creating any kind of unintended consequenc­es or collateral damage,” Ryan, R-Wis., said Tuesday.

Perdue said he told Kelly that the White House should first let the economy

‘The president’s instincts are right that we need access in these markets. But (tariffs) need to be very targeted.’

U.S. Sen. David Perdue R-Ga.

“breathe a little while” to let the effects of the tax overhaul take hold, and to then focus on targeting individual countries or specific steel and aluminum products.

“To say that we’re going to do something broad like that could be problemati­c,” he said.

Perdue’s Georgia colleague U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson issued a similar warning last week.

“This proposed tax would slam the brakes on the progrowth, pro-jobs agenda that

Congress and the president have been fighting for,” the third-term Republican said in a press release that also called for a “targeted approach” to unfair trade policies.

Perdue has rarely broken ranks with Trump since his inaugurati­on. Isakson has also steered clear of criticizin­g the president directly.

A recent Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on survey of business and economic experts concluded that the tariffs would have mixed effects in Georgia but would likely lead to higher costs for companies — and eventually consumers. The state’s agricultur­e industry could be hit especially hard.

For his part, Trump has pushed back against critics of his tariffs proposal.

“We’re not backing down,” he said Monday.

The president said he does not expect the proposed tariffs to cause a trade war, but two days earlier he said on Twitter that such battles are “good, and easy to win.”

 ?? ZACH GIBSON /POOL / TNS ?? U.S. Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., shakes hands with President Donald Trump recently. Perdue, who rarely breaks ranks with Trump, is urging him to change direction on his tariff proposal.
ZACH GIBSON /POOL / TNS U.S. Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., shakes hands with President Donald Trump recently. Perdue, who rarely breaks ranks with Trump, is urging him to change direction on his tariff proposal.

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