Houston Chronicle

The Harley issue puts pressure on Wisconsin governor.

Walker’s Milwaukee-based company faces threat of tariffs from Trump

- By Scott Bauer

MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s full-throttled love of Harley-Davidson motorcycle­s has been intertwine­d with his rising political career, but now he must navigate revvedup criticism of the Milwaukee-based company from President Donald Trump.

The president on Tuesday tweeted that if Harley goes through with its plans to move some production overseas, “it will be the beginning of the end — they surrendere­d, they quit! The Aura will be gone and they will be taxed like never before!”

Trump was referring to tariffs Harley-Davidson would face on motorcycle­s produced overseas and shipped back to the U.S. for sale.

Walker has avoided directly criticizin­g Trump on the issue, repeatedly saying instead that no tariffs would be good for Wisconsin manufactur­ers and farmers. He hasn’t spelled out what he would do to further that policy and his spokeswoma­n repeated that same position Tuesday when asked to react to Trump’s tweets.

“Governor Walker believes there should be no tariffs or trade barriers as the President stated earlier this month at the G7 summit,” Walker spokeswoma­n Amy Hasenberg said. “When there’s a level playing field, American workers and businesses win.”

Walker’s Democratic opponents — eight are running for a chance to take him on — pounced on the conflict.

“Wisconsin needs a governor who says Donald Trump is a dangerous idiot on every issue from immigratio­n to trade policy,” said Madison Mayor Paul Soglin. “I am saying it.”

Walker owns a 2003 Harley Road King motorcycle that he’s driven across the state to promote tourism and his own political ambitions. When Walker officially launched his presidenti­al run in 2015, about half of his stops in the first week were at Harley shops and he exclusivel­y wore motorcycle boots. At a presidenti­al debate that year, the motorcycle-boot wearing Walker said his Secret Service nickname as president would be “Harley.”

In an October re-election campaign launch video touting his record, Walker rides his Harley and asks the viewer, “Are you with me?”

Trump made fun of Walker for his love of motorcycle­s during the presidenti­al race. At a rally in Janesville in 2016, Trump said: “He doesn’t look like a motorcycle guy to me. I’m sorry.”

Harley has also long lobbied against retaliator­y tariffs, saying they put the company at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge. Harley said Monday it came to its decision to move some production overseas because of retaliator­y tariffs it faces in an escalating trade dispute between the U.S. and the European Union.

Trump denied Tuesday that his trade policy was to blame for Harley’s decision.

 ?? Daniel Acker / Bloomberg file ?? Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker awaits the start of a group ride on his Harley Davidson motorcycle in 2015.
Daniel Acker / Bloomberg file Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker awaits the start of a group ride on his Harley Davidson motorcycle in 2015.

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