Trump announces tariffs of 30% on Mexico and the European Union

KayleeBusiness2025-07-1552515
Stacked shipping containers in the commercial port of Barcelona on July 7. - Angel Garcia/Bloomberg/Getty Images

President Donald Trump on Saturday threatened duties of 30% on products from Mexico and the European Union, two of America’s biggest trading partners, in an ongoing tariff campaign that’s upended global trade since he retook office in January.

“The United States of America has agreed to continue working with the European Union, despite having one of our largest Trade Deficits with you. Nevertheless, we have decided to move forward, but only with more balanced and fair TRADE,” Trump wrote in the letter to Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, which he posted to Truth Social.

Trump has imposed a slate of tariffs on US trading partners this year – then paused, modified, raised or lowered them, in a chaotic barrage of policy actions that’s left everyone from major nations to individual Americans trying to figure out how to plan for the future even as economic uncertainty grows.

The EU and Mexico join a growing list of countries whose imports will face updated duties on August 1, since Trump began posting tariff letters on Monday with rates of up to 40%.

In his letters to the EU and Mexico, Trump said that all imports were subject to the 30% tariff, excluding “Sectoral Tariffs,” such as the 25% auto tariff.

Von der Leyen said Saturday in a statement that the EU remains “ready to continue working towards an agreement” by the August 1 deadline.

But, she said, a 30% tariff on EU exports would hurt supply chains, businesses and consumers on both sides of the Atlantic. The EU “will take all necessary steps to safeguard EU interests, including the adoption of proportionate countermeasures if required,” von der Leyen wrote.

French President Emmanuel Macron agreed on X that the European Commission must “resolutely defend European interests.”

“In particular, this implies speeding up the preparation of credible countermeasures, by mobilising all the instruments at its disposal, including anti-coercion, if no agreement is reached by August 1st,” he wrote in his post.

The EU’s countermeasures, which cover $24.54 billion of US exports, will be delayed until early August, von der Leyen announced Sunday. European officials have also developed a second list of countermeasures that is “by now agreed to,” she said.

Macron and von der Leyen’s sentiments were echoed by other European Union officials in the strongest public pushback to the Trump administration’s political pressure and trade whiplash that ensued in May.

Products from Mexico, meanwhile, have mostly been able to enter the country duty-free, granted they were compliant with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) Trump negotiated in his first term. In his letter addressed to Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, Trump said that tariff barriers were imposed to stop the flow of fentanyl into the United States, which he has previously used to justify earlier tariffs on Mexico as well.

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“Mexico has been helping me secure the border, BUT, what Mexico has done, is not enough,” Trump wrote.

Mexico’s economy minister Marcelo Ebrard posted on X that a Mexican delegation told United States officials during a Friday meeting that plans to establish a new tariff rate would be “unfair treatment and that we did not agree.” But the United States and Mexico are negotiating to find an “alternative to protect businesses and jobs on both sides of the border.”

“The letter clearly states that the aim is to reach an agreement so that these tariffs are not imposed,” Sheinbaum said Saturday in a speech in the city of Guaymas, adding that she is confident about reaching an agreement and better trade terms with the United States.

In the tariff letters, which were dated on Friday, Trump said that any retaliation of tariffs charged on US imports would be met with pushback from the United States. Trump said that “whatever the number you choose to raise (tariffs) by, will be added onto the 30% that we charge.”

He blamed both tariff and non-tariff trade barriers as additional reasons for imposing tariffs on the EU and Mexico.

Tractor-trailers wait in line at the Ysleta-Zaragoza International Bridge port of entry, on the US-Mexico border in Juarez, Mexico, on April 3. - Justin Hamel/Bloomberg/Getty Images

The Trump administration has taken particular issue with value-added and digital services taxes, which are prominent in several EU member countries.

Digital service taxes are levied on the gross revenue that online firms collect from offering services to users. Countries with these taxes would be able to tax all the revenue large companies that operate online collect — even if the business is unprofitable. That can include what they collect from selling data, advertising as well as payments they receive for subscriptions, software and other kinds of online services users pay for.

Trump and members of his administration said on multiple occasions that the EU was not negotiating in good faith. And two months ago, Trump was so enraged by the lack of progress in trade talks that he was prepared to slap a 50% tariff on goods from the EU come June 1. “I’m not looking for a deal,” he said at the time.

A 30% tariff on the EU is more than the 20% “reciprocal” tariff which goods from there faced before Trump paused them in mid-April.

After Trump made the threat in May, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a Fox News interview that the “EU proposals have not been of the same quality that we’ve seen from our other important trading partners.”

On Saturday afternoon, Bessent posted on X that the United Kingdom “smartly secured an early deal.”

The letters to the EU and Mexico come after Trump threatened 35% tariffs on some Canadian goods on Thursday.

According to the US Trade Representative’s office, EU member countries are together America’s largest trading partner at nearly $976 billion in two-way goods traded in 2024. Mexico traded nearly $840 billion in two-way goods and Canada traded just over $762 billion in two-way goods with the United States.

This story has been updated with additional content.

CNN’s Elisabeth Buchwald and Anna Cooban contributed to this report.

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Lily

Trump's announcement of 30% tariffs on Mexico and the European Union is a controversial bid to protect domestic industries at risk, with potentially severe consequences for global trade relations.

2025-07-25 14:04:47 reply
Bridger

Trump's 30% tariffs announcement on Mexico and the European Union is possibly a strategically calculated move to renegotiate trade agreements, albeit with unprecedented economic repercussions that threaten global supply chains.

2025-07-25 14:05:00 reply
Fintan

Trump's decision to impose 30% tariffs on Mexico and the European Union signals a bold move towards protectionism, which could lead not only to increased prices for consumers but also strained economic ties between nations.

2025-07-26 20:04:49 reply
Lavinia

Today's announcement of 30% tariffs from the US, targeting Mexico and European Union markets by President Trump represents a significant move towards protecting domestic interest which could have profound consequences on global trade relations.

2025-07-26 20:05:05 reply
Ethan

President Trump's announcement of implementing 30% tariffs on both Mexico and the European Union marks a bold but contentious move that could disrupt global trade dynamics, spark international retaliations while potentially fueling economic unrest worldwide.

2025-08-14 09:08:46 reply
Callan

Though faced with various criticisms from both domestic and international stakeholders, Trump's announcement of imposing 30% tariffs on Mexico & the European Union aims to protect American jobs by curbing imports; however its long-term consequences for trade relations have yet remained unscathed.

2025-08-18 06:14:45 reply
Jalen

Trump's announcement of 30% tariffs on Mexico and the European Union further escalates global trade tensions, with potential to stunt economic growth worldwide.

2025-08-18 06:14:59 reply
Delia

President Trump's announcement of 30% tariffs on imports from Mexico and the European Union raises concerns over potential impacts to global trade, escalating tensions in economic diplomacy & undermining ongoing negotiations for revamped North American Free Trade Agreement.

2025-08-23 08:32:22 reply
Luther

The announcement of 30% tariffs by Trump on Mexico and the European Union shows a significant escalation in trade tensions, with potential consequences for many industries across both regions.

2025-08-23 08:32:37 reply
Isolde

President Trump's announcement of 30% tariffs on Mexico and the European Union further escalates tensions in global trade relations, threatening to jeopardize previously established agreements with potential detrimental effects for both sides as well.

2025-08-23 08:32:52 reply
Maxine

A shift in trade policies by implementing punitive tariffs threatens to exacerbate economic tensions and disrupt global supply chains, likely leading Europeans or Mexico-based businesses towards alternative trading arrangements.

2025-08-27 00:36:01 reply
Callum

Trump's decision to impose a 30% tariff on Mexico and the European Union is an economic gamble that could lead not only to retaliatory strikes but also exacerbate global trade tensions, threatening cross-border cooperation in multiple sectors.

2025-08-27 00:36:17 reply
Jenna

The announcement of Trump’s 30% tariffs on Mexico and the European Union represents a significant trade dispute with potential to reshape global supply chains, disrupting economic stability for both当事方, while also generating unforeseen consequences that could negatively impact consumers worldwide.

2025-08-27 00:36:31 reply
Talia

The announcement of 30% tariffs by Trump on Mexico and the European Union marks a significant escalation in cross-border trade tensions, potentially leading to complex retaliatory measures & severe consequences for global supply chains.

2025-08-31 18:57:48 reply
Remy

The announcement of 30% tariffs by Trump against both Mexico and the European Union is a short-sighted move that could risk escalating trade wars, plunge economies into uncertainty while hurting consumers worldwide.

2025-08-31 18:58:03 reply

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