EU plans to engage more with other nations hit by US tariffs: Sources
The EU is preparing to step up its engagement with other countries hit by
Mr Donald Trump's tariffs following a slew of new threats to the bloc and other US trading partners, according to people familiar with the matter.
The contacts with nations including Canada and Japan could include the potential for coordination, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations.
The move comes as talks between the EU and the US have dragged on and continue to be stuck on several issues, including cars and tariff rates on agriculture.
Member states were briefed on the status of talks on July 13.
Earlier in the day, European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc will extend the suspension of trade countermeasures against the US until Aug. 1 to allow for further talks. The measures had been adopted in response to tariffs imposed earlier by Mr Trump on steel and aluminium before being paused a first time, and were due to snap back into place at midnight on July 15.
'At the same time, we will continue to prepare further countermeasures so we are fully prepared,' Ms von der Leyen told reporters in Brussels on July 13, while reiterating the EU's preference for a 'negotiated solution.'
The current list of countermeasures would hit about €21 billion (S$31.4 billion) of US goods, while the EU has another one ready of about €72 billion, as well as some export controls, that will be presented to member states as early as July 14, said the people.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Business From wellness zone to neurodivergent room: How companies are creating inviting, inclusive offices
Singapore Govt will continue to support families, including growing group of seniors: PM Wong at PCF Family Day
Singapore Swift action needed to stop vaping's slide from health risk to drug epidemic
Singapore Experts call for legal agility to tackle influx of drug-laced vapes in Singapore
Singapore askST Jobs: Feeling the pinch? Here's what to do if your pay rise is not matching inflation rate
Opinion Hong Kong's past is disappearing, one icon at a time
Asia Heaven sent? India's opposition parties build temples to woo Hindu voters
Sport Sinner dethrones Alcaraz to capture maiden Wimbledon crown
Ms Von der Leyen also said that the EU's anti-coercion instrument, the bloc's most powerful trade tool, won't be used at this point. 'The ACI is created for extraordinary situations,' she said. 'We are not there yet.'
In a social media post responding to Mr Trump's announcement, French President Emmanuel Macron called for the speeding-up of preparations for credible countermeasures, including the anti-coercion tool, if no agreement is reached by Aug. 1.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on July 14 evening said 30 per cent tariffs would hit exporters in Europe's largest economy 'to the core' if a negotiated solution in the trade conflict can't be found.
Mr Merz said he was coordinating closely with other leaders to ensure tariffs of such magnitude don't come into force. 'That requires two things: unity in the European Union and good lines of communication with the American president,' the conservative leader told ARD in an interview.
Mr Trump has sent letters to a slew of trading partners, tweaking tariff levels proposed in April and inviting them to further talks. In a letter published July 12, the US president warned the EU it would face a 30 per cent rate from August if better terms can't be negotiated.
The EU had sought to conclude a tentative deal with the US to stave off higher tariffs, but Mr Trump's letter punctured recent optimism in Brussels over the prospects for an 11th-hour agreement. Other countries like Mexico, which has also been negotiating with the US, were surprised to receive similar letters.
The EU is seeking a tariff no higher than 10 per cent on agricultural exports. An offset mechanism that some carmakers had pushed as a way to grant tariff relief to companies in return for investments in the US isn't under consideration for now, amid worries from the EU that it could shift production across the Atlantic.
The bloc's negotiators are focusing talks on car tariffs instead, according to people familiar with the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations.
Negotiations between the US and EU are expected to continue this week, said the people.
The US and the EU have been discussing an initial deal that would see most EU exports hit with a 10 per cent tariff, with limited exemptions for some industries such as aviation and medical devices, Bloomberg previously reported. The EU has also been arguing for lower rates on spirits and wines, as well as mitigating through quotas the 50 per cent tariffs that Mr Trump has imposed on steel and aluminium. The US has proposed a 17 per cent tariff on agricultural products. Any initial agreement would also cover non-tariff barriers, economic security cooperation and strategic purchases.
In addition to a universal levy now due in August, Mr Trump has also introduced 25 per cent levies on cars and parts, as well as double that on metals. The president is working to introduce sectoral levies in other areas, including pharmaceuticals and semiconductors, and recently announced a 50 per cent duty on copper.
Any deal at this stage wouldn't automatically shield the EU from those sectoral measures, but the bloc continues to seek preferential treatment in the potentially affected industries.
BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
14 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Democrats must ‘toughen up' against Trump, Obama tells donors
The former president's words were a critique of the party's elites for having gone quiet when they were sorely needed to step up. WASHINGTON – Former President Barack Obama has a stern critique for members of his party: Too many have been cowed into silence. In private remarks to party donors on the night of July 11, Mr Obama scolded Democrats for failing to speak out against President Donald Trump and his policies, suggesting they were shrinking from the challenge out of fear of retribution. 'It's going to require a little bit less navel-gazing and a little less whining and being in fetal positions. And it's going to require Democrats to just toughen up,' Mr Obama said at a fundraiser for the Democratic National Committee at the home of New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy. 'What I have been surprised by is the degree to which I've seen people who, when I was president, or progressives, liberals, stood for all kinds of stuff, who seem like they are kind of cowed and intimidated and shrinking away from just asserting what they believe, or at least what they said they believe,' he added. Locked out of power in Washington, Democrats have been largely arguing among themselves about how to confront a hostile Trump administration. Mr Obama's remarks were circulated by his office on July 14. He expressed particular disdain for law firms that he said had been willing to 'set aside the law' in response to Mr Trump's actions 'not because, by the way, that they're going to be thrown in jail, but because they might lose a few clients and might not be able to finish that kitchen rehab at their Hampton house. I'm not impressed'. Mr Obama did not mention Columbia University, his alma mater, which is on the verge of paying hundreds of millions of dollars to settle with the Trump administration over accusations it permitted antisemitism on campus, or identify any of the prominent Democratic law firms that have made deals with Mr Trump's White House. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Business 'Some cannot source outside China': S'pore firms' challenges and support needed amid US tariffs Multimedia From local to global: What made top news in Singapore over the last 180 years? World Trump arms Ukraine and threatens sanctions on countries that buy Russian oil Singapore Turning tragedy into advocacy: Woman finds new purpose after paralysis Opinion Sumiko at 61: Everything goes south when you age, changing your face from a triangle to a rectangle Sport World Aquatics C'ship women's 10km open water swimming event delayed by a day due to water quality Singapore HSA intensifies crackdown on vapes; young suspected Kpod peddlers nabbed in Bishan, Yishun Singapore Ex-cop charged after he allegedly went on MHA portal, unlawfully shared info with man But the former president's comments were interpreted by people in the room as a critique of the party's elites for having gone quiet when they were sorely needed to step up, according to a person who attended. The excerpts provided by Mr Obama's office contained no evidence of physician-heal-thyself reflectiveness. Mr Obama, after all, has scarcely been at the tip of the Democratic spear in resisting Mr Trump. He has issued few public statements opposing Trump administration actions and has yet to appear in 2025 at a rally, town hall or other public event staged by opponents of Mr Trump. Mr Obama has spent much of his post-presidential life producing movies , documentaries and podcasts while building a beachfront compound in Hawaii and playing golf on Martha's Vineyard. In June, Mr Obama appeared in a conversation in Connecticut with celebrity historian Heather Cox Richardson during which he said the country was 'dangerously close' to sliding into autocracy. On July 11, not only did Mr Obama scold Democrats who have failed to speak out against Mr Trump and his administration, he also appeared to mock the level of sacrifice or risk-taking that doing so required. He invoked the 9-foot-by-9-foot prison cell in which anti-apartheid icon and politician Nelson Mandela spent 27 years, saying, 'Nobody's asking for that kind of courage.' Mr Obama warned that the country was in danger of backsliding on the steady social progress it has made since World War II – a period 'in which everything kept getting better, more or less,' he said. 'For most of our lives, it was easy to stand for equality and justice, et cetera,' Mr Obama said. 'You didn't really have to make a lot of sacrifices. That hasn't been true for most of human history or American history. It's still not true in most of the world. So these are moments where your values are tested and you have to stand up for them.' 'Don't tell me you're a Democrat, but you're kind of disappointed right now, so you're not doing anything,' Mr Obama added. 'Don't say that you care deeply about free speech and then you're quiet. No, you stand up for free speech when it's hard. When somebody says something that you don't like, but you still say, you know what, that person has the right to speak. It is, you know, what's needed now is courage.' During the fundraiser, Mr Obama praised the Democratic nominees for governor of New Jersey, Representative Mikie Sherrill, and Virginia, former Representative Abigail Spanberger. He also urged donors to contribute to the Democratic National Committee, which his own aides worked to diminish during his presidency. Mr Obama also waded into a dispute between the party's left and some moderates, telling the donors that, whatever their ideology, it was incumbent on Democrats to produce tangible results for voters if they hoped to win elections and regain power. 'You want to deliver for people and make their lives better? You got to figure out how to do it,' he said. 'I don't care how much you love working people. They can't afford a house because all the rules in your state make it prohibitive to build.' NYTIMES


AsiaOne
28 minutes ago
- AsiaOne
Zelenskiy thanks Trump for readiness to support Ukraine, World News
KYIV — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Monday (July 14) he had spoken to US President Donald Trump after his announcement of new weapons for Ukraine and thanked him for his support. "It was a very good conversation. I thanked him for his readiness to support Ukraine and to continue working together to stop the killings and establish a lasting and just peace," Zelenskiy wrote on the Telegram messaging app. Zelenskiy said he and Trump had agreed to speak more frequently and "continue coordinating our steps". He also said he had a very good conversation with Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte, who met with Trump at the White House on Monday. Trump told reporters he was disappointed in Russian President Vladimir Putin and that billions of dollars of US weapons would go to Ukraine. He also threatened sanctions on buyers of Russian exports unless Russia agreed to a peace deal, expressing frustration at repeated Russian attacks on Ukrainian cities. But the threat of sanctions came with a 50-day grace period. The weapons would include Patriot air defence missiles, which Ukraine has urgently sought. Zelenskiy had earlier met US special envoy to Ukraine Keith Kellogg in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, where they discussed boosting Ukraine's air defences and Kyiv buying weapons with European help. Trump had said on Sunday that he would send Patriot air defence missiles to Ukraine. "We discussed the path to peace and what we can practically do together to bring it closer. This includes strengthening Ukraine's air defence, joint production, and procurement of defence weapons in collaboration with Europe," Zelenskiy wrote on X. "And of course, sanctions against Russia and those who help it." Trump, who began his second term with a more conciliatory approach to Russia, has in recent weeks signalled disenchantment with Putin as Moscow has stepped up air strikes on Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities. An air-raid alert was declared in Kyiv shortly after the meeting between Kellogg and Zelenskiy on Monday. [[nid:720063]]

Straits Times
30 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Will the conspiracists cultivated by Trump turn on him over Epstein?
There is a feeling among some longtime supporters of Mr Donald Trump's that their shared journey has reached the terra incognita. WASHINGTON - After years spent spreading spidery conspiracy theories for his own political gain, US President Donald Trump has found himself wrapped up in the stickiest one of them all. For more than a week, the political movement he created has been convulsing with righteous fury over things he and his attorney general have been saying and doing – or rather, not doing – as it relates to the life and death of Jeffrey Epstein . Mr Trump keeps commanding his supporters to move on from their fixations over the disgraced financier and registered sex offender. But many of his supporters simply cannot swallow the anticlimactic conclusion that the Department of Justice put forth a week ago when it basically said there was nothing to see here, folks. By the week's end, a rabble of conspiracists who've been hand-fed for years by Mr Trump broke into open revolt against him. The fallout is testing the power the president holds over his most loyal followers, the ones who have trusted him all along and who believed they would learn a whole lot more about the Epstein saga if they returned Mr Trump to office. It is entirely too soon to know what the revolt will mean or if and when it might sputter out, but the nature of it was stunning to behold. It was like a Möbius strip of paranoia and distrust: A political movement that galvanised and exploded around a conspiracy theory – lies about Mr Barack Obama's birthplace were central to Mr Trump's political rise – cannibalising itself over the mother of all modern conspiracy theories. And in a twist, Mr Trump's usual playbook for getting himself out of trouble seemed not to be working this time – in fact, it was only making his predicament worse. In his social media post on July 12, he tried to cast the blame for any unresolved Epstein mysteries on Mr Obama, Ms Hillary Clinton and Mr Joe Biden. But the base was not buying it. 'People are really upset at the outright dismissal of it,' said Ms Natalie Winters, the 'War Room' correspondent and 24-year-old protege of Mr Steve Bannon. 'I have a good pulse on these people,' she said of Mr Trump's base. 'I have never seen such sustained wavering.' Asked about the backlash on July 14, a White House spokesperson, Mr Harrison Fields, did not comment on specifics but said that Mr Trump was focused on 'protecting civil rights, safeguarding communities, holding criminals accountable and defending victims'. Still, there is a feeling among some longtime supporters of Mr Trump's that their shared journey has reached the terra incognita. 'Trump's persuasive power over his base, especially during his first term, was almost magical,' Mr Mike Cernovich, the prolific pro-Trump social media commentator, wrote in a post on the social platform X on July 13. 'The reaction on Epstein should thus be startling to him. No one is buying it. No one is dropping it.' Inside the White House, there is a kind of battle-hardened sangfroid among staff members, who see this outrage as just another controversy that will blow itself out like all the others. One person close to Mr Trump conceded that even by July 13 the president had yet to fully grasp how deep and wide the discontent was because he does not spend much time on the internet where Epstein conspiracy-mongering plays out. Despite his social media presence, Mr Trump is a 79-year-old man whose media diet consists primarily of cable news and print newspapers. But by July 14, news networks like CNN were devoting much more airtime to the uproar. This is not the first time his base has been upset with him. There was much disillusionment after he encouraged Americans to take Covid vaccines, and there has been outcry over his hawkish foreign policy moves, such as when he ordered the US strike that killed Iranian general Qassem Soleimani, or, more recently, dropped bombs on Iranian nuclear facilities . But the conjecture around Epstein's crimes and death is a many-layered mania that can not really be compared to anything else. The shadowy concepts that undergird the whole thing go to the 'very foundation of Maga,' as Ms Winters put it, because, in her view and the view of people like her, 'it gets to the heart of who is in control of the country.' She summed up the movement's sense of betrayal this way: 'I just think it's frankly very grifty to have spent your entire career promoting, even if it weren't the Epstein thing directly, but the idea that there is this deep state, the idea that there's this unelected class of, you know, bankers, corporation, countries, intel agencies, blah, blah, blah. And then finally, you have the power to expose it, and either you're not, because there's nothing there, in which case it makes you a liar – and I don't believe that – or you're ineffective, or you're compromised.' This twisted tale has raised fundamental questions about the limits of Mr Trump's abilities to control the conspiratorial forces he has plied in his pursuit of the presidency. He sprang to power at a time of deep mistrust in this country following two wars and a financial crisis, selling himself as the only one who could be trusted to tell the truth about a corrupt uniparty cabal that sold out the country. One phrase he repeated constantly during that first run for president was 'believe me'. He said it about all sorts of situations and subjects. Believe me. Believe me. Believe me. He was the one who would expose the hidden hand squeezing them all. But now that he is the one in control of the government, he is telling his supporters to move on from all of that. It has left many of them mystified. 'Honestly, I don't know,' Ms Winters said when asked why she thought Mr Trump posted what he did July 12. 'It's bizarre. I just don't know.' NYTIMES