32.1 C
Los Angeles
Wednesday, March 18, 2026, 02:52 PM
HomeBusinessTrump's Trade Aggression: EU Food in the Crosshairs

Trump’s Trade Aggression: EU Food in the Crosshairs

Date:

Related stories

Trump administration Cuts US Citizenship Renunciation Fee to $450

The Trump administration has announced a major reduction...

Transparency Protocols to Standardize the $21 Billion Resale Authentication Market

The global journey toward a transparent and circular fashion...

Sinner’s Indian Wells Triumph Leaves No More Mountains to Climb on Hard Courts

Jannik Sinner has climbed every mountain hard-court tennis has...

Trump Sticks Knife Into NATO After Iran Military Wins Prove Self-Sufficiency

President Donald Trump stuck the knife into NATO on...

Fitness Guidance That Cuts Through the Noise: 15 Rules for Rapid Fat Loss

In a fitness landscape filled with contradictory advice and...

Donald Trump’s renewed trade aggression has put European food exports directly in the crosshairs, with a threat of a 17% tariff on farm produce and processed foods. This significant duty would hit popular European goods such as Belgian chocolate, Irish Kerrygold butter, and olive oil from Italy, Spain, and France, all highly valued by American consumers.
The warning was reportedly delivered to EU trade commissioner Maroš Šefčovič during high-level talks in Washington with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. This latest move underscores Trump’s consistent “aggressive negotiating position,” which he once controversially described as “nastier” than China in trade.
While the European Union’s trade spokesperson, Olof Gill, confirmed that negotiations continue with a focus on a “negotiated solution” and “agreement in principle,” the bloc’s preparedness for escalation is evident. The EU has made it clear that it is prepared for a potential trade war, with retaliatory duties on various US products, including Bourbon and Boeing 747s, if an amicable resolution isn’t reached before the upcoming deadline.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen highlighted the difficulty of securing a comprehensive deal within the tight timeframe, instead aiming for a high-level framework agreement. The EU is also seeking immediate tariff relief for critical sectors, particularly the auto industry, which currently faces a substantial 27.5% US tariff. The 90-day pause on Trump’s “liberation tariffs” concludes for over 60 countries this Wednesday, intensifying pressure on all parties to find a resolution.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories