How EU is preparing to play hardball in face of Trump's tariffs
- US President Donald Trump intends to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum, effective March 12, to influence trading partners, treating negotiations as zero-sum games.
- The EU has finalized trade deals with Mercosur and Japan to counteract Trump's stance on multilateralism and tariffs.
- Commission President Ursula von der Leyen stated the EU-Mercosur agreement is crucial for economic cooperation and growth.
- Both the US and EU recognize the need for dialogue to prevent economic harm from escalating trade tensions.
11 Articles
11 Articles
EU arms against Trump’s tariffs: breaking internal barriers, depreciating the euro and putting taxes
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Keir Starmer's EU 'reset' faces inquiry as alarm raised over Donald Trump and China 'risk'
Sir Keir Starmer's "relations reset" with the European Union looks set to come under scrutiny in an inquiry launched by the Foreign Affairs Select Committee.The inquiry, which is calling for evidence on cross-continent relations, comes amid growing concerns about Donald Trump's stance on Europe and the "risk" posed by China.Starmer will need to address how the UK can maintain "strong relations" with the US and EU and if divergence from the EU ri…
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