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Theresa May tells Trump want to know more Trump’s trade tariff plans
UK Prime Minister Theresa
May has raised “deep concern” with US President Donald Trump over his
declared plans to impose tariffs of 25 percent on imports of steel and
10 percent on aluminum.
May called Trump on Sunday after global stock markets tumbled in the
face of a threatened trade war with China, and escalating tensions
between the US and Europe Union.
“The prime minister raised our deep concern at the president’s
forthcoming announcement on steel and aluminum tariffs, noting that
multilateral action was the only way to resolve the problem of global
overcapacity in all parties’ interests,” a spokeswoman for May’s Downing
Street office said Sunday.
May's de facto deputy also earlier condemned Trump's trade rhetoric.
"I just think that the United States is not taking an advisable course
in threatening a trade war,” Cabinet Office minister David Lidington
told the BBC's Sunday Politics program. "Trade wars don't do anybody any
good."
Experts have warned that Trump’s protectionist policy, which he
announced via twitter earlier this week, would lead to a trade war.
Undeterred by warnings, however, the businessman-turned-president
justified his move by claiming that his country was losing billions of
dollars on trade and added that “trade wars are good, and easy to win.”
President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker reacted to
Trump’s tariffs by saying the EU would forcefully target US imports such
as Harley-Davidson motorbikes, Levi’s jeans and even alcoholic drinks.
Trump stepped up the war of words, saying if Europe proceeds with the threat the US would take countermeasures.
“If the EU wants to further increase their already massive tariffs
and barriers on US companies doing business there, we will simply apply a
tax on their cars which freely pour into the US. They make it
impossible for our cars (and more) to sell there. Big trade imbalance!”
he said Saturday.
The trade war is likely to hurt May’s plans for a post-Brexit UK,
where London would heavily rely on its business ties with the US and
other parts of the world to boost its economic growth after leaving the
EU.
May admitted in a speech Friday that there were “hard facts” Britain
should be ready to face about the economic consequences of Brexit.
She confirmed the UK would leave the EU’s single market and customs
union after Brexit in March 2019, noting the country may suffer new
trade barriers as a result of her move.
Trump has promised May a “major trade deal” that, ironically, would save London from the EU’s “very protectionist” policies.