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Senior US officials said President Donald Trumpās tariff defeat at the Supreme Court wonāt unravel deals negotiated with US partners as they sought to defend the administrationās assertive trade policies. Ā Ā
Those deals ā which the administration made with partners including China, the European Union, Japan and South Korea ā remain in place, US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said Sunday on CBSāsĀ Face the Nation. He sought to separate those arrangements from the planned 15% global tariff Trump announced Saturday.
āWe want them to understand these deals are going to be good deals,ā Greer said. āWeāre going to stand by them. We expect our partners to stand by them.ā
Friction over the renewed uncertainty spilled out Sunday as the European Parliamentās trade chief said heāll propose freezing the EUās ratification of a trade deal with the US until the Trump administration clarifies its policy. In New Delhi, officials cited similar reasons for IndiaĀ postponing talksĀ in the US this week on finalizing an interim trade deal.
The US Supreme Court ruling that struck down Trumpās use of emergency authority to wield tariffs preceded his planned trip next month to China. Greer suggested that alternative US trade tools, including those involving investigations of other countriesā trade practices, would give the US leverage.
āWe have tariffs like this already in place on China, we have open investigations already,ā he said.
Trump is expected to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping during his visit starting March 31.
āThe president and Xi have a strong relationship,ā Greer toldĀ Fox News Sunday.Ā The US maintains an average tariff of 40% on China without using the emergency law struck down by the court, he said.
Trumpās approach to trade, largely nullified by the Supreme Court, nevertheless has riled US trading partners worldwide, including the EU.Ā
Greer said he āspoke with my counterpart from the EU this weekendā and would be talking with officials of other key US trading partners to reassure them.
āRest assured, Iāve been speaking to these folks as well,ā Greer told CBS. āIāve been telling them for a year ā whether we won or lost, we were going to have tariffs, the presidentās policy was going to continue.ā
āThatās why they signed these deals even while the litigation was pending,ā he said.
The European Commission, the EUās executive arm in Brussels, said Sunday it wants āfull clarityā on the Trump administrationās next steps. āA deal is a deal,ā the blocās executive arm said in a statement, adding that it expects the US to honor its commitments under a trade deal signed in August.
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said itās ācritically importantā for global trade to āhave clarityā from the US administration.
āI hope itās going to be clarified, and itās going to be sufficiently thought through so that we donāt have, again, more challenges and the proposals will be in compliance with the constitution, in compliance with the law,ā Lagarde said onĀ Face the Nation.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said earlier Sunday the US was in contact with its foreign trading partners āand they like the tariff deals.ā
āSo you know, theyāre not going to be changed,ā Bessent said on Fox NewsāĀ Sunday Morning Futures.
Representative Don Bacon, a Republican tariff skeptic who has praised the Supreme Court ruling, said in aĀ social postĀ that Trumpās new 15% tariff order āwill not endure.ā
The new tariffs will be based on Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act, which allows the president to impose tariffs for 150 days without congressional approval underĀ specific circumstances, including ālarge and seriousā balance of payments deficits.
āIt is not Constitutional,ā Bacon said on X. āItās not only terrible policy, but it is also bad politics.ā
Read More:Ā EU May Freeze US Trade Deal Approval on Trump Tariff āChaosā
Greer signaled that US trade partners shouldnāt count on tariff relief based on the Supreme Court ruling.Ā
He said the 15% global tariff that Trump announced Saturday is āroughly equivalent to the types of tariffs that we had in placeā under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act ā the tool that the court ruled Trump canāt use for tariffs.
āThe reality is, we want to maintain the policy we have, have as much continuity as possible,ā Greer said on ABCāsĀ This Week.Ā
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
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