Business Day (Nigeria)

Donald Trump is leaning towards car tariffs, says top ally

Senator Chuck Grassley says US president wants to put pressure EU over farm products

- JAMES POLITI

Chuck Grassley, the top US senator on trade policy and a close ally of Donald Trump, said the president was leaning towards slapping tariffs on automotive imports, in the hope of forcing Brussels to further open the EU market to American farm products.

In a briefing with reporters in the US Capitol on Wednesday, Mr Grassley said Europe was “very afraid” of US tariffs on cars and car part imports and they could be “the instrument that gets Europe to negotiate” on agricultur­e.

“I think it would not necessaril­y be the best thing to do but I think the president is inclined to do it,” Mr Grassley, the 85-year-old Iowa Republican who is chairman of the Senate finance committee, said in reference to car tariffs. “I’m not in favour of tariffs but they are a fact of life when Trump is in the White House — they may be an effective tool.”

Mr Grassley’s comments came ahead of a February 17 deadline for the US commerce department to publish a report on whether automotive imports constitute a threat to US national security, which could pave the way for Mr Trump to slap tariffs on the products in a big blow to both the EU and Japan.

US negotiator­s are pressing hard for the EU to drop its resistance to the inclusion of agricultur­e in trade talks that were launched after a summit in July last year between Mr Trump and Jean-claude Juncker, president of the European Commission. They are taking that position even though the agreement reached at the time only envisaged a narrower package based on regulatory reform and lowering trade barriers related to non-auto industrial goods.

While American officials may be tempted to use the car tariffs as leverage to get the EU to make concession­s, European officials have warned that automotive levies would halt the negotiatio­ns in their tracks and lead to retaliatio­n, unless Brussels was granted an exemption. A US move to slap tariffs on cars and car parts would do great damage to EU and Japanese car manufactur­ers, including those that have manufactur­ing facilities in the US but use foreign-made components such as engines.

If Mr Trump presses ahead with tariffs after the commerce department issues its report, it may not affect all car and car parts imports. Wilbur Ross, US commerce secretary, told the Financial Times in December that all options were on the table and that Mr Trump would have a lot of “flexibilit­y” in deciding whether and how to impose any levies.

Mr Grassley — who has recently met with both Cecilia Malmstrom, the EU trade commission­er, and Robert Lighthizer, the US trade representa­tive — said bringing agricultur­e into the negotiatio­ns was essential to getting any trade deal approved by the US Congress. He said farmers and farm lobby groups were a “locomotive” that brought manufactur­ing and services groups along as well.

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