Republican Pushback On Trump Tariffs Gathers Steam Talk Of Modifications Emerge
WASHINGTON/MEXICO CITY – Republican lawmakers stepped up calls on
Tuesday for President Donald Trump to pull back from proposed tariffs on
steel and aluminum imports as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
added to an avalanche of criticism of the measures, saying they risked
igniting a trade war and damaging the U.S. economy.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) speaks after the Senate
Republican weekly policy luncheon on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S.,
March 6, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua RobertsMcConnell’s comments came after
House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan criticized the proposed 25
percent duty on steel and 10 percent on aluminum as too broad. Although
the measure is designed to hit China, its main impact will be on U.S.
allies like Canada.
The White House has said the measures will protect industries and jobs
from unfair competition and that across-the- board tariffs are needed
because countries like China use third countries for shipping steel to
the United States, disguising its origin.
Opponents charge that the tariffs could destroy more jobs than they
create, risk alienating U.S. allies and that American consumers will end
up paying more for a range of products from cans of beer to cars.
“There is a lot of concern among Republican senators that this could
sort of metastasize into sort of a larger trade war, and many of our
members are discussing with the administration just how broad, how
sweeping this might be,” McConnell said in his first comments on the
issue.
Related CoverageLinking steel and NAFTA will not get a better deal:
Canada's MorneauTop U.S. Senate Republican says metal tariffs could lead
to trade warFinancial markets have rallied off their lows on
expectations the measures may be watered down in the face of an intense
lobbying effort from leading Republicans, although Trump has so far
stuck to his guns in public.
On Tuesday, Representative Mark Meadows, the head of the Freedom Caucus,
a staunchly conservative Republican grouping in Congress, raised
concerns about the impact of the tariffs on American manufacturing and
agriculture. Agriculture is a potential target for retaliatory tariffs
from China if Trump pushes ahead.
Meadows, who spoke to reporters after a closed-door meeting with House
Republicans, said: “Most of the conversation I heard was not in support
of that particular decision.”
Those comments came after sharp criticism of the tariffs from Ryan and
Representative Mark Walker. Walker heads the Republican Study Committee,
which has about 150 members, a majority of the party’s lawmakers in the
House.
Ryan, whose home state of Wisconsin could be hit by proposed
counter-tariffs from the European Union, returned to the attack on
Tuesday. He has consistently opposed the tariffs and called for “more
surgical and more targeted measures.”
Republican Senator David Perdue of Alabama, a close Trump ally, said he
had spoken to White House Chief of Staff John Kelly on Tuesday morning
and when by asked by reporters about the meeting said he “thinks Trump
is open to change.”
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) speaks after the Senate
Republican weekly policy luncheon on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S.,
March 6, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua RobertsTrump was presented with three
options by the Commerce Department. The broad tariffs that he announced
last week were one. He also had the option of a much higher duty of 53
percent on steel imports on a narrower group of 12 countries that did
not include Canada, Mexico and the European Union, although all
countries would be subject to quotas.
For aluminum, China, Hong Kong, Russia, Venezuela and Vietnam would be subject to direct tariffs and others to quotas.
The final option called for quotas for both industries to limit imports.
Slideshow (9 Images)
MEXICO FIRES BACK
Washington said on Monday that if Canada and Mexico agreed to its
demands in the NAFTA talks, they could be exempted from the proposed
steel and aluminum tariffs. The trilateral talks have gone on for six
months with few signs of progress.
Mexican Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo raised the prospect of
reprisals if Washington pushed ahead with tariffs and insisted the North
American Free Trade Agreement remain “a trilateral accord” in response
to a U.S. proposal to hold talks with Canada and Mexico separately.
“There’s a list (of U.S. products) that we are analyzing internally, but
we won’t make it public, we’re going to wait,” Guajardo told the
Televisa network in an interview.
Canada has also said it would take counter-measures, as has the European Union.
Trump has vowed to cut America’s trade deficit and accuses countries
like China of cheating. He has launched an investigation into
intellectual property abuses by China, a move that could dwarf any
impact of the steel and aluminum proposals and trigger a sharp response
from Beijing.
Fred Bergstein, who has held top economics posts in a series of U.S.
administrations and is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for
International Economics think tank, warned on Tuesday that the proposed
tariffs would undermine Washington’s efforts to rein in China by
alienating potential allies.
“President Trump’s recent trade actions, especially the announced plans
to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum, will have little effect on
China. In fact, they will make confronting China with an alliance of
trading partners much harder,” he said.
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