
15 March 2026
Trump Administration Targets EU With Section 301 Investigations Amid Tariff Revenue Push
European Union Tariff News and Tracker
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Welcome to European Union Tariff News and Tracker, your essential update on the trade tensions shaping our transatlantic future. Listeners, the Trump administration has zeroed in on the European Union amid a high-stakes push to recover $1.6 trillion in lost tariff revenue after the Supreme Court's February 20 ruling struck down broad emergency import taxes, according to the Los Angeles Times.
U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer announced investigations under Section 301 of the 1974 Trade Act targeting the EU alongside 15 other economies, including China, South Korea, and Japan. These probes examine whether EU government subsidies are fueling excessive factory capacity that harms U.S. manufacturing, with public hearings set for May 5. A second investigation scrutinizes the EU and dozens of others for failing to ban forced-labor goods, with hearings on April 28, the LA Times reports.
This follows Trump's immediate 10% global tariff on all imports under Section 122, which he plans to hike to 15%—the legal maximum for 150 days—though it's already facing lawsuits from small businesses and Democrat-led states in the U.S. Court of International Trade, as detailed by Power 107 Radio. Critics like the Liberty Justice Center argue Section 122 only applies to balance-of-payments crises, impossible under floating exchange rates.
For the EU, these moves signal escalating pressure. The LA Times notes existing U.S. tariffs on steel, cars, and lumber persist, projected to yield $668 billion over a decade per Tax Foundation estimates, but experts warn the new patchwork approach invites challenges and delays. Trump frames tariffs as revenue to offset $4.7 trillion in tax cut costs, per Congressional Budget Office figures, even as studies from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York show American consumers foot the bill.
With midterms looming, polls show 70% of voters blame tariffs for rising prices, fueling backlash. The EU must brace for potential duties covering 70% or more of U.S. imports.
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U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer announced investigations under Section 301 of the 1974 Trade Act targeting the EU alongside 15 other economies, including China, South Korea, and Japan. These probes examine whether EU government subsidies are fueling excessive factory capacity that harms U.S. manufacturing, with public hearings set for May 5. A second investigation scrutinizes the EU and dozens of others for failing to ban forced-labor goods, with hearings on April 28, the LA Times reports.
This follows Trump's immediate 10% global tariff on all imports under Section 122, which he plans to hike to 15%—the legal maximum for 150 days—though it's already facing lawsuits from small businesses and Democrat-led states in the U.S. Court of International Trade, as detailed by Power 107 Radio. Critics like the Liberty Justice Center argue Section 122 only applies to balance-of-payments crises, impossible under floating exchange rates.
For the EU, these moves signal escalating pressure. The LA Times notes existing U.S. tariffs on steel, cars, and lumber persist, projected to yield $668 billion over a decade per Tax Foundation estimates, but experts warn the new patchwork approach invites challenges and delays. Trump frames tariffs as revenue to offset $4.7 trillion in tax cut costs, per Congressional Budget Office figures, even as studies from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York show American consumers foot the bill.
With midterms looming, polls show 70% of voters blame tariffs for rising prices, fueling backlash. The EU must brace for potential duties covering 70% or more of U.S. imports.
Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe now for weekly updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/
Avoid ths tariff fee's and check out these deals https://amzn.to/4iaM94Q
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI