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Sunday, June 15, 2025

Trump threatens 50% tariffs on EU and 25% penalties on Apple as his trade war intensifies

by

GUARDIAN MEDIA NEWSROOM
22 days ago
20250523
President Donald Trump attends a Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Commission Event in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, May 22, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

President Donald Trump attends a Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Commission Event in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, May 22, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Jacquelyn Martin

Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump on Fri­day threat­ened a 50% tax on all im­ports from the Eu­ro­pean Union as well a 25% tar­iff on Ap­ple prod­ucts un­less iPhones are made in Amer­i­ca.

The threats, de­liv­ered over so­cial me­dia, re­flect Trump’s abil­i­ty to dis­rupt the glob­al econ­o­my with a burst of typ­ing, as well as the re­al­i­ty that his tar­iffs have yet to pro­duce the trade deals he is seek­ing or the re­turn of do­mes­tic man­u­fac­tur­ing he has promised vot­ers.

The Re­pub­li­can pres­i­dent said he wants to charge high­er im­port tax­es on goods from the EU, a long-stand­ing US al­ly, than from Chi­na, a geopo­lit­i­cal ri­val that had its tar­iffs cut to 30% this month so Wash­ing­ton and Bei­jing could hold ne­go­ti­a­tions. Trump was up­set by the lack of progress in trade talks with the EU, which has pro­posed mu­tu­al­ly cut­ting tar­iffs to ze­ro even as the pres­i­dent has pub­licly in­sist­ed on pre­serv­ing a base­line 10% tax on most im­ports.

“Our dis­cus­sions with them are go­ing nowhere!” Trump post­ed on Truth So­cial. “There­fore, I am rec­om­mend­ing a straight 50% Tar­iff on the Eu­ro­pean Union, start­ing on June 1, 2025. There is no Tar­iff if the prod­uct is built or man­u­fac­tured in the Unit­ed States.”

That post had been pre­ced­ed by a threat of im­port tax­es against Ap­ple for its plans to con­tin­ue mak­ing its iPhone in Asia. Ap­ple now joins Ama­zon, Wal­mart and oth­er ma­jor U.S. com­pa­nies in the White House’s crosshairs as they try to re­spond to the un­cer­tain­ty and in­fla­tion­ary pres­sures un­leashed by his tar­iffs.

“I have long ago in­formed Tim Cook of Ap­ple that I ex­pect their iPhone’s that will be sold in the Unit­ed States of Amer­i­ca will be man­u­fac­tured and built in the Unit­ed States, not In­dia, or any­place else,” Trump wrote. “If that is not the case, a Tar­iff of at least 25% must be paid by Ap­ple to the U.S.”

The state­ment by Trump is crit­i­cal in that he sug­gests the com­pa­ny it­self would bear the price of tar­iffs, con­tra­dict­ing his ear­li­er claims as he rolled out a se­ries of ag­gres­sive tar­iffs over the past sev­er­al months that for­eign coun­tries would shoul­der the cost of the im­port tax­es. In gen­er­al, im­porters pay the tar­iffs and the costs are of­ten passed along to con­sumers in the form of high­er prices.

In re­sponse to Trump’s tar­iffs on Chi­na, Ap­ple CEO Tim Cook said ear­li­er this month that most iPhones sold in the U.S. dur­ing the cur­rent fis­cal quar­ter would come from In­dia, with iPads and oth­er de­vices be­ing im­port­ed from Viet­nam. Af­ter Trump rolled out tar­iffs in April, bank an­a­lysts es­ti­mat­ed that a $1,200 iPhone would if made in Amer­i­ca jump in price any­where from $1,500 to $3,500.

Stocks sold off af­ter Trump’s post­ings, with the S&P 500 in­dex down rough­ly 0.5% in ear­ly Fri­day af­ter­noon trad­ing. The mar­kets have de­vel­oped a hair trig­ger sen­si­tiv­i­ty to the U.S. pres­i­dent’s state­ments, of­ten slump­ing when he an­nounces high tar­iffs and ral­ly­ing when he re­treats from those threats.

U.S. Trea­sury Sec­re­tary Scott Bessent tried to pro­vide some clar­i­ty on Trump’s post­ings in a Fri­day in­ter­view on the Fox News show “Amer­i­ca’s News­room.”

Bessent said the EU has a “col­lec­tive ac­tion prob­lem” be­cause its 27 mem­ber states are be­ing rep­re­sent­ed by “this one group in Brus­sels,” such that the “un­der­ly­ing coun­tries don’t even know what the EU is ne­go­ti­at­ing on their be­half.”

The Trea­sury sec­re­tary said he was not in a White House meet­ing this week that Cook at­tend­ed, but he al­so spoke with the Ap­ple CEO this week. Bessent said the goal was to have Ap­ple bring more of its com­put­er chip sup­ply chain in­to the U.S.

The core of Trump’s ar­gu­ment against the EU is that Amer­i­ca runs a “to­tal­ly un­ac­cept­able” trade deficit with the 27 mem­ber states. Coun­tries run trade deficits when they im­port more goods than they ex­port.

From the van­tage point of the EU’s ex­ec­u­tive com­mis­sion, trade with the U.S. is rough­ly in bal­ance if both goods and ser­vices are in­clud­ed. As a glob­al cen­ter for fi­nance and tech­nol­o­gy, the U.S. runs a trade sur­plus in ser­vices with Eu­rope. That off­sets some of the trade gap in goods and puts the im­bal­ance at 48 bil­lion eu­ros ($54 bil­lion).

Ger­man For­eign Min­is­ter Jo­hann Wade­phul said the EU’s ex­ec­u­tive com­mis­sion has his coun­try’s full sup­port in work­ing to “pre­serve our ac­cess to the Amer­i­can mar­ket.”

“I think such tar­iffs help no one, but would just lead to eco­nom­ic de­vel­op­ment in both mar­kets suf­fer­ing,” Wade­phul said in Berlin. “So we are still count­ing on ne­go­ti­a­tions, and sup­port the Eu­ro­pean Com­mis­sion in de­fend­ing Eu­rope and the Eu­ro­pean mar­ket while at the same time work­ing on per­sua­sion in Amer­i­ca.”

Trump aides have said the goal of his tar­iffs was to iso­late Chi­na and strike new agree­ments with al­lies, but the pres­i­dent’s tar­iff threats un­der­mine the log­ic of those claims. Not on­ly could the EU face high­er tar­iffs than Chi­na, but the bloc of mem­ber states might have been bet­ter off by es­tab­lish­ing a broad front with Chi­na and oth­er coun­tries against Trump’s trade pol­i­cy, said Ger­man econ­o­mist Mar­cel Fratsch­er.

“The strat­e­gy of the EU Com­mis­sion and Ger­many in the trade con­flict with Trump is a to­tal fail­ure,” Fratsch­er, the head of the Ger­man In­sti­tute for Eco­nom­ic Re­search, said on X. “This was a fail­ure you could see com­ing — Trump sees Eu­rope’s wa­ver­ing, hes­i­ta­tion and con­ces­sions as the weak­ness­es that they are.”

Mary Love­ly, a se­nior fel­low at the Pe­ter­son In­sti­tute for In­ter­na­tion­al Eco­nom­ics, said the 50% tar­iffs on Eu­rope are most like­ly a “ne­go­ti­at­ing ploy” by Trump. She said Trump seems to be­lieve that ne­go­ti­a­tions op­er­ate by go­ing to a “threat point” that could risk self-harm just to demon­strate how se­ri­ous he is, in hopes that do­ing so would pro­duce an agree­ment.

But Love­ly said that in the long-run Trump’s ap­proach “sug­gests that the U.S. is an un­re­li­able trad­ing part­ner, that it op­er­ates on whim, not on rule of law.”

Trump has run hot and cold on his re­la­tion­ship with Ap­ple, a sign that cur­ry­ing fa­vor with him might not nec­es­sar­i­ly shield a com­pa­ny from his anger. He has es­sen­tial­ly told com­pa­nies such as Wal­mart to “eat” the costs of his tar­iffs in­stead of rais­ing prices, even though do­ing so could squeeze prof­its and cause lay­offs. He now ap­pears to de­ploy­ing a sim­i­lar de­gree of pres­sure to force Ap­ple to ac­cept the high­er costs of re­lo­cat­ing its sup­ply chains.

Trump had pre­vi­ous­ly cre­at­ed an ex­emp­tion on elec­tron­ics im­port­ed from Chi­na to help com­pa­nies such as Ap­ple, some­thing he could now re­move. He al­so threat­ened sep­a­rate 25% im­port tax­es on com­put­er chips and could have the tar­iffs sched­ule rewrit­ten in ways that could ex­pose Ap­ple prod­ucts to the tax­es.

Un­til re­cent­ly, the U.S. pres­i­dent re­peat­ed­ly bragged about the $500 bil­lion that Ap­ple in Feb­ru­ary pledged to in­vest do­mes­ti­cal­ly as part of its de­vel­op­ment of ar­ti­fi­cial in­tel­li­gence tech­nolo­gies. But he pub­licly turned against the com­pa­ny last week while speak­ing in Qatar.

“I had a lit­tle prob­lem with Tim Cook yes­ter­day,” Trump told the au­di­ence. “I said to him, ‘My friend, I treat­ed you very good. You’re com­ing here with $500 bil­lion, but now I hear you’re build­ing all over In­dia. I don’t want you build­ing in In­dia.’”

An­a­lysts have been skep­ti­cal that Ap­ple could quick­ly shift de­vice man­u­fac­tur­ing to the U.S., main­ly be­cause it has spent decades em­bed­ding com­plex sup­ply chains in Chi­na to feed the fac­to­ries. But it al­so has the chal­lenge of grap­pling with “the un­pre­dictable na­ture of the cur­rent U.S. ad­min­is­tra­tion,” said Ben Wood, chief an­a­lyst at U.K.-based re­search firm CCS In­sight.

“At any mo­ment, things can change overnight, mak­ing it ex­treme­ly dif­fi­cult for com­pa­nies such as Ap­ple to plan their busi­ness,” Wood said. “It seems that de­spite the best ef­forts of the Ap­ple lead­er­ship team to lob­by the U.S. ad­min­is­tra­tion to treat the iPhone more fa­vor­ably, a curve­ball can come out of nowhere and de­rail any plans they have in place.” —WASH­ING­TON (AP)

_________

Sto­ry by JOSH BOAK | As­so­ci­at­ed Press

AP writ­ers Paul Wise­man and David McHugh in Frank­furt, Ger­many; Geir Moul­son in Berlin; and Kelvin Chan in Lon­don con­tributed to this re­port.


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