logo
Trump fires off more tariff letters, threatens Brazil with 50% levy

Trump fires off more tariff letters, threatens Brazil with 50% levy

Qatar Tribune4 days ago
DPA
Washington
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday sent a barrage of letters to eight more countries dictating steep new tariff rates as of August 1, including a 50% levy on goods from Brazil. Trump posted the two-page letters - addressed to the leaders of the Philippines, Brunei, Moldova, Algeria, Iraq, Libya, Sri Lanka and Brazil - on his Truth Social platform. The latest batch comes two days after he sent letters to 14 countries, including key allies Japan and South Korea, telling them to expect higher tariffs unless new trade deals can be struck. Algeria, Libya, Iraq and Sri Lanka face tariff rates of 30%, while Brunei and Moldova were threatened with 25% and the Philippines with 20%.
Trump told Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva to expect a 50% rate due to the treatment of former far-right president Jair Bolsonaro, who is standing trial for plotting to overturn the 2022 election results and stage a coup. Trump called the criminal charges against the firebrand nationalist 'an international disgrace.' 'This Trial should not be taking place,' Trump wrote in the letter.
'It is a Witch Hunt that should end IMMEDIATELY!' In a statement, Lula said Brazil was a sovereign nation with independent institutions. Charges against Bolsonaro were exclusively under the jurisdiction of Brazil's Judicial Branch and are 'not subject to any interference or threats that could compromise the independence of national institutions,' Lula said. 'Sovereignty, respect and the unwavering defence of the interests of the Brazilian people are the values that guide our relationship with the world.' Any increase in tariffs by the US would 'be addressed in accordance with Brazil's Economic Reciprocity Law,' Lula said.
He rejected Trump's claim regarding a US trade deficit with Brazil. 'Statistics from the US government itself show a surplus of $410 billion in the trade of goods and services with Brazil over the past 15 years.' Trump's tariff blitz Trump has been rolling out new tariff rules for goods entering the US since Monday, when he also extended a 90-day pause on his so-called reciprocal tariffs first announced on April 2. The tariffs have sent heads spinning in corporate boardrooms and foreign capitals. Investors, however, seem to be taking the news in their stride as US stocks continue to push higher. Trump said on Tuesday he will stick to his August 1 deadline, writing on Truth Social: 'No extensions will be granted.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump 'Antagonistic' to Values and Members of the NAACP
Trump 'Antagonistic' to Values and Members of the NAACP

Al Jazeera

time11 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

Trump 'Antagonistic' to Values and Members of the NAACP

Trump 'Antagonistic' to Values and Members of the NAACP Quotable Joi Chaney, says the NAACP's decision not to invite Trump to its convention reflects how Black communities are feeling about Donald Trump. Video Duration 01 minutes 00 seconds 01:00 Video Duration 01 minutes 47 seconds 01:47 Video Duration 00 minutes 50 seconds 00:50 Video Duration 01 minutes 41 seconds 01:41 Video Duration 01 minutes 20 seconds 01:20 Video Duration 01 minutes 00 seconds 01:00 Video Duration 01 minutes 14 seconds 01:14

EU delays retaliatory tariffs against US amid hopes for trade deal
EU delays retaliatory tariffs against US amid hopes for trade deal

Al Jazeera

time14 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

EU delays retaliatory tariffs against US amid hopes for trade deal

The European Union has delayed retaliatory tariffs on exports from the United States as officials scramble to reach a trade deal with Washington ahead of US President Donald Trump's August 1 deadline. Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, said on Sunday that the bloc would extend its suspension of countermeasures as it continued negotiations with the Trump administration. 'At the same time, we will continue to prepare for the countermeasures, so we're fully prepared,' von der Leyen said during a news conference in Brussels. 'We have always been very clear that we prefer a negotiated solution,' she added. 'This remains the case, and we will use the time that we have now until the 1st of August.' The EU's announcement comes after Trump on Saturday unveiled plans to slap a 30 percent tariff on European and Mexican exports from August 1. The EU in March announced retaliatory tariffs on 26 billion euros ($30bn) of US exports in response to Trump's duties on steel and aluminium. The bloc paused the measures for 90 days the following month after Trump announced he would delay the implementation of his so-called 'reciprocal tariffs'. The EU's pause had been due to expire at midnight on Monday. EU trade ministers are scheduled to convene in Brussels on Monday to discuss options for responding to Trump's latest tariff threats. On Sunday, White House Economic Adviser Kevin Hassett said that Trump was not happy with the 'sketches of deals' presented by US trade partners and that their offers 'need to be better'. 'These tariffs are real if the president doesn't get a deal that he thinks is good enough, but, you know, conversations are ongoing, and we'll see where the dust settles,' Hassett told ABC News's This Week. Taken together, EU member countries are the US's largest trading partner. US-EU trade in goods and services amounted to 1.7 trillion euros ($2 trillion) in 2024, according to EU statistics agency Eurostat.

EU chief delays retaliation for United States tariffs in search of deal
EU chief delays retaliation for United States tariffs in search of deal

Qatar Tribune

time19 hours ago

  • Qatar Tribune

EU chief delays retaliation for United States tariffs in search of deal

Agencies EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said Sunday that Brussels will continue to hold off on hitting back at US steel and aluminum tariffs, as it seeks a deal to avoid broader 30-percent levies. US President Donald Trump on Saturday threw months of painstaking negotiations into disarray by announcing he would hammer the 27-nation bloc with the sweeping tariffs if no agreement is reached by August 1. 'The United States has sent us a letter with measures that would come into effect unless there is a negotiated solution, so we will therefore also extend the suspension of our countermeasures until early August,' von der Leyen told journalists. 'At the same time, we will continue to prepare for the countermeasures so we're fully prepared,' she added. The European Commission president insisted that the European Union has 'always been very clear that we prefer a negotiated solution. This remains the case, and we will use the time that we have now till August 1'. The move by von der Leyen will spur hope that Trump's latest threat—in which he also targeted Mexico—has not killed off the progress made in negotiations so far between Brussels and Washington. The European Union's current suspension of its retaliation over US steel and aluminum tariffs had been set to expire overnight Monday to Tuesday. Brussels has readied duties on US goods worth around 21 billion euros ($24 billion) in response to the levies Trump slapped on metal imports earlier this year. But it announced in April it was holding off on those measures to give space to find a broader trade agreement with the Trump administration. 'Since the very beginning, we have worked and now are ready to respond with countermeasures. We've prepared for this, and we can respond with countermeasures if necessary,' von der Leyen said. EU trade ministers are set to meet Monday in Brussels to discuss the bloc's response to Trump's latest move—and crucially how strong a line to take with Washington. Germany's finance minister Lars Klingbeil said on Sunday that 'serious and solution-oriented negotiations' with the United States were still necessary, but added that if they fail, the European Union would need 'decisive countermeasures to protect jobs and businesses in Europe'. 'Our hand remains outstretched but we won't accept just anything,' Klingbeil told daily newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung. That came after French President Emmanuel Macron on Saturday urged the European Commission—which negotiates on behalf of all EU countries—to 'resolutely defend European interests'. Since returning to the presidency in January, Trump has unleashed sweeping stop-start tariffs on allies and competitors alike, roiling financial markets and raising fears of a global economic downturn. But his administration is coming under pressure to secure deals with trading partners after promising a flurry of agreements. So far, US officials have only unveiled two pacts, with Britain and Vietnam, alongside temporarily lower tit-for-tat duties with China. The European Union, alongside dozens of other economies, had been set to see its US tariff level increase from a baseline of 10 percent on July 9, but Trump pushed back the deadline to August 1. In a letter published on Saturday, Trump cited the United States's trade imbalance with the bloc as justification for the new 30-percent levies. The EU tariff is markedly steeper than the 20-percent levy Trump had unveiled in April—before hitting pause as markets went into meltdown.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store