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Trump Extends Deadline for 50% Tariffs on EU Goods to July 9

The US president told reporters the decision to push the deadline came after he had a ‘very nice’ phone call with Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
President Trump signed multiple executive orders effectively ending federal DEI programmes.
Trump has said that he wants to use tariffs to encourage companies to build plants in the US rather than overseas to manufacture goods. (Getty Images)

President Donald Trump said he would extend the deadline for the European Union to face 50 percent tariffs until July 9 after a phone call with Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

“We had a very nice call and I agreed to move it,” Trump told reporters Sunday at Morristown Airport in New Jersey on his way back to Washington.

Von der Leyen, who heads the EU’s executive arm, said earlier Sunday in a post on X that “Europe is ready to advance talks swiftly and decisively,” but “a good deal” will need “time until July 9.” That’s the date that Trump’s 90-day pause of his so-called reciprocal tariffs had originally been set to end.

The EU had been slated for a 20 percent tariff under those reciprocal rates announced in April, and a temporary pause took the rate down to 10 percent through July 9.

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But Trump on Friday threatened to impose a higher, 50 percent tariff on the EU starting June 1 after complaining the bloc was slow-walking negotiations and unfairly targeting US companies with lawsuits and regulations.

The EU has been struggling to understand what Trump is looking for in trade negotiations. Officials have suggested that the EU and US could take their tariffs down to zero on many goods, but Trump has been focused on what he calls non-tariff trade barriers.

Deputy Treasury secretary Michael Faulkender said on Fox’s Sunday Morning Futures hours earlier that the US faces a “simultaneous challenge” of negotiating with the EU as a bloc on tariffs while also seeking to address most of those non-tariff barriers in talks with individual European nations, creating a “negotiation problem.”

The EU last week shared a revived trade proposal with the US in a bid to boost talks, and the bloc’s trade chief, Maros Sefcovic, held a call with his US counterpart, Jamieson Greer, on Friday.

The new EU framework covers tariff and non-tariff barriers, as well as ways to enhance economic security, mutual investments, strategic purchases and cooperation on global challenges, according to people familiar with the matter who requested anonymity to discuss the terms, which are not public.

Trump’s 50 percent tariff threat would hit $321 billion worth of US-EU goods trade, lowering US gross domestic product by close to 0.6 percent and boosting prices by more than 0.3 percent, according to Bloomberg Economics calculations.

The US president has said that he wants to use tariffs to encourage companies to build plants in the US rather than overseas to manufacture goods. On the same day he announced the 50 percent EU tariff threat, he also threatened 25 percent tariffs on smartphones made abroad by companies like Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co.

But on Sunday, Trump said he agrees with recent comments by Treasury secretary Scott Bessent that the US doesn’t need to bring back textile manufacturing into its borders.

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“We’re not looking to make sneakers and T-shirts, and we want to make military equipment,” Trump said, adding he wants to make “big things” in the US, citing chips, computers and AI development.

By Jennifer A. Dlouhy

Learn more:

Trump Tariffs Hit European Luxury, Shares Tank

LVMH and Hermès stock fell about 3 percent and 4 percent respectively, in line with sector peers including Kering, Prada and Burberry, after the US president announced a 50 percent duty on imports from the European Union.

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