Trade disputes threaten US-EU relations, even as courts weigh Trump tariffs

Blue car bodies are lifted at "Factory 56", one of the world's most modern car assembly halls of Mercedes-Benz.
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Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters/File
Car bodies are lifted at Factory 56, one of the world's most modern electric and conventional car assembly halls of German carmaker Mercedes-Benz, in Sindelfingen near Stuttgart, Germany, March 4, 2024. European automakers are grappling with trade tariffs, including those introduced by the U.S., which have caused financial uncertainty.

​​Two federal courts have blocked major portions of President Donald Trump’s trade agenda, but that doesn’t mean his tariffs – or his efforts to extract concessions from trade partners like the European Union – are over. For now, his tariffs stay in place, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday, until it can review one of the cases.

The legal drama began Wednesday, when the U.S. Court of International Trade ruled that President Trump had exceeded his authority under a 1977 law to impose tariffs on other nations. Then on Thursday, U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras came to the same conclusion, although his ruling only applies to the two companies that filed the suit.

Markets around the world initially surged Thursday as investors cheered the prospect that the president’s aggressive trade actions would be reined in, or at least delayed. Then the trade court’s decision was paused by the federal appeals court while the arguments are being reviewed.

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While courts review the legality of President Trump’s tariff threats, the longer-term risks of America’s chaotic trade policy include lost confidence of longtime allies.

Even if the earlier rulings are upheld, they wouldn’t block all of Mr. Trump’s tariffs, such as on steel and aluminum imports. But they target some of his biggest moves. These include initial tariffs against Mexico, Canada, and China due to fentanyl imports, as well as his Liberation Day tariffs of 10% or higher on all nations’ imports to the U.S.

In both cases, the administration invoked a 1977 law, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which outlines conditions under which a president can declare a national emergency to take control of foreign trade, an arena usually under Congress’s purview.

The IEEPA Act does not “delegate an unbounded tariff authority to the President,” the trade court wrote Wednesday. The ruling has thrown a wrench in President Trump’s continued rollout of aggressive trade actions.

The European Union is a front-burner case study of how U.S. trade policy is in flux. In the past week alone, Mr. Trump threatened to impose 50% tariffs on European goods entering the U.S., and then pushed back his June 1 deadline to July 9 after positive talks with EU leaders over the weekend. Now, the two sides are fast-tracking talks to reach a bargain.

At stake is nearly $1 trillion worth of trade in mostly high-value goods. If a transatlantic trade war breaks out, it could prove different from, but as far-reaching as, the U.S.-China conflict, analysts say. Instead of shortages of basic goods from China, American consumers and companies could see higher prices on European pharmaceuticals, cars, specialized industrial machinery and electric goods, and parts flowing to the U.S.

And if Europe retaliates, as it has threatened to do, the U.S. could see reduced sales of oil and gas, pharmaceuticals, aerospace goods, medical equipment, and cars flowing in the other direction. That’s far more total trade in terms of value than the diminished U.S.-China trade flows.

More than money lost

Perhaps the biggest long-term casualty would be political rather than economic: the loss of trust and cooperation between longtime allies.

If a trade war does break out, “We won’t see it as much in the prices at Walmart or at Target,” says Ryan Chahrour, a professor of economics at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. “If we really put those kinds of barriers there, we could see ... a probably bigger impact in a lot of these important industries.”

The administration’s pattern of big threats followed by negotiations has created uncertainty for businesses and roiled markets in the past. That may be one reason that markets initially cheered a ruling that might limit such actions in the future.

But the enthusiasm faded as some analysts pointed out that the administration retains many options to get its way on trade. It has already appealed the trade court ruling. It could use authority other than the 1977 IEEPA to impose tariffs. Thus, that Wednesday ruling, while a setback for the administration, may add new uncertainty to the picture without changing the outcome for America’s biggest trading partners.

On paper, a deal with the EU looks far more likely than one with China.

People walk past a Louis Vuitton store in New York City, where prices may rise due to proposed tariffs on European imports..
Adam Gray/Reuters
People walk past a Louis Vuitton store in New York, May 23, 2025. Amid the tariff chaos, Louis Vuitton handbags have become more expensive in the U.S. Luxury analysts said last month that the French luxury brand had increased prices by roughly 4% on its website.

“The U.S.’s substantive problems with the EU are less dramatic, less severe, and the EU has been more forward-leaning in offering solutions,” says Scott Kennedy, a China specialist and senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “If the U.S. is willing to take yes for an answer, it’s much more likely to resolve those differences with the EU first than with China.”

For example, experts say, it should be far easier for European companies to open factories in the U.S. – a key goal of the Trump administration – than for Apple, Samsung, and other smartphone makers to relocate their assembly operations from China to the U.S. President Trump is threatening 25% tariffs on the tech giants if they don’t replace low-cost Chinese labor with high-priced American workers. Europe, by contrast, already has high labor costs.

Bargain barriers

But there are challenges for the U.S. and EU to get to, analysts say, especially in resolving long-standing disputes between the two trading partners.

One is the U.S. negotiating position, which is to impose tariffs and then ask for something in return for lifting those tariffs, says Mary Lovely, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. That’s not the kind of win-win bargaining that can lead to important breakthroughs.

A related challenge is the Trump administration’s negotiating style, she adds. American threats and counterthreats don’t inspire cooperation.

A third problem is that it’s not clear what the EU can offer to satisfy President Trump. He has pushed for reform of European taxes that hurt sales of U.S. goods. But that’s the purview of individual countries, not the EU. He has also targeted agriculture. For decades, Europe has resisted American demands that it reduce farm subsidies and allow imports of crops infused with genetically modified organisms into the European market. This would increase sales of American crops.

“Letting GMOs into Europe more broadly? That’s a nonstarter,” says Dr. Chahrour of Cornell. “So what can the EU give up to make the U.S. happy? It’s not clear.”

President Donald Trump sits behind his desk, facing a bank of reporters in the White House Oval Office in Washington.
Leah Millis/Reuters
President Donald Trump responds to reporters' questions after announcing a trade deal with the United Kingdom, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, May 8, 2025.

One deal, and it has sticky issues

The only U.S. trade deal negotiated so far, with the United Kingdom, doesn’t offer much guidance. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer had little economic leverage and was eager for a deal, so he acceded earlier this month to most of America’s demands. That includes better access for some U.S. farm and commercial aviation goods while allowing America’s 10% tariff on British goods to remain in place.

But stickier issues, such as Britain’s tax on digital services and its restrictions on U.S. chicken imports, remain unresolved, wrote conservative economist and columnist Peter Morici, a former director of the Office of Economics at the U.S. International Trade Commission, in a recent column in The Washington Times. The British deal “demonstrates the limits of foreign governments’ willingness to yield to tariff bullying.”

Some nations may have no choice but to find an agreement.

When size matters

“Smaller countries are more likely to kowtow to the U.S. They don’t have any kind of negotiating power,” says Dr. Lovely of the Peterson Institute.

“But the EU and China are different,” she says. “They’re very large trading blocks. And I would imagine that while we may see something coming [in terms of a deal], it’s unlikely that the U.S. will really get much from all of this.”

Several analysts believe the two sides will reach some kind of deal.

“Although there will be fits and starts and tariffs could go back up, eventually the U.S. will probably have no choice but to accept the EU offer because the alternative will be further escalation and further isolation of the United States,” says Dr. Kennedy, the China specialist.

The longer-term damage may be geopolitical, says Dr. Chahrour. “The most likely scenario is one in which cooperation between the U.S. and Europe on all kinds of issues is going to be less, it’s going to be harder to achieve. And there’s going to be a lot of negative consequences from that loss of confidence in each other.”

Editor’s note: This article was updated May 29, the day of initial publication, with news of new court action on tariff policies.

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