EU Reporter
  • News Categories
    • Featured
    • Politics
    • World
    • Defence
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Energy
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Opinion
    • Google News
    • Animal Welfare
    • Human Rights
  • Latest Videos
  • Featured
  • Collaborate
  • Sponsorship
  • About
  • Team
  • Contact
Connect with us
EU Reporter EU Reporter

EU Reporter

Revive #TTIP, as EU retaliation aids Trump's re-election

  • Featured
  • Politics
    • EU's labour productivity slightly increased in Q1 2026

    • Commission calls for equal pay rules to become a reality across the EU

    • EU exports of shark fins dropped in 2025

    • Justice and Home Affairs Council

    • New EU rules on pay transparency explained

  • World
    • Western investors eye Russian assets again as sanctions discounts persist

    • EU disburses nearly €2.8 billion to support Ukraine's financial stability and reform efforts

    • Commission endorses Lithuania’s €884 million Social Climate Plan to support vulnerable households and micro-enterprises in the clean transition

    • Message to Kemi Badenoch: 'Make a splash by thinking out-of-the-box on UK-Europe relationship'

    • Inconvenient questions about Andorra and San Marino that Brussels should be asking

  • Economy
    • Podcast: The story behind data on hazardous chemicals

    • Debt, AI and Algorithms: How the bond market is being reshaped

    • Give your career a real take off

    • EU agri-food trade surplus expands in February 2026

    • Energy use in the industry sector continues to decline

  • Energy
    • Commission approves €23 billion Italian state aid scheme to support renewable electricity production

    • Commission approves €9 billion Spanish capacity mechanism for security of electricity supply

    • Energy use in the industry sector continues to decline

    • Improving energy efficiency of buildings to reduce bills and save energy

    • Copenhagen Forum underlines importance of energy infrastructure

  • Education
    • Connecting classrooms with fusion research: Commission welcomes school teachers from across Europe to ITER

    • Algae4Schools open call Co-Creation Programme

    • New global science highlights business risks from nature loss, as EU steps up investment and private finance for nature

    • Explore education and training in the EU

    • The role of the IB in Azerbaijan’s education sector

  • Environment
    • EU green jobs: Which activities employ the most people?

    • Podcast: The story behind data on hazardous chemicals

    • Commissioner Roswall meets young Europeans to discuss a resilient nature-based future

    • OceanEye: Placing the EU at the forefront of ocean observation

    • Commission accelerates transition away from animal testing in chemical safety assessments

  • Health
    • EU Drugs Agency warns of new health risks, including a rising trend in ketamine use

    • Impasse in European Union Tobacco Tax Reform: The Swedish veto

    • Várhelyi says unilateral measures by the US against the EU ‘would not be justified’

    • 490+ experts call for €10 billion ring-fenced health allocation in EU budget

    • ENVI opinion signals early resistance to Biotech Act SPC extension

  • Lifestyle
    • Up, up and away for iconic aircraft's model version

    • EU funded films win at Cannes

    • Zebec and Tangem bring crypto awareness campaign to Bundesliga

    • Commission sends Statements of Objections to several companies concerning synthetic turf cartels

    • Hitting the right notes: That's Azerbaijani jazz

  • AI
  • Google News
  • Fact Check
    • Trapped in the feed: How endless scrolling warps our reality and wears us down

    • Separating fact from fiction: The BRICS currency debate

    • How Nigerian news outlets spread disinformation on the Ukraine-Russia conflict

    • Goolammv ‘unmasking’ raises more questions than it answers

    • Nova Resistência in Brazil: Identifying Dangerous Narratives and Stemming Their Influence

  • More
    • Affiliate Sites
      • London Globe
      • New York Globe
      • Globe Nederland
      • Globo Espana
      • Le Globe France
      • Globus Deutschland
      • Globo Diroma
      • Brussels Standard
      • News Wire
      • Coin Reporter
    • Animal welfare
      • Commission accelerates transition away from animal testing in chemical safety assessments

      • Europe's broken promise, 300 million times over

      • Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana will no longer promote fur at Milan Fashion

      • Parliament moves to clean up pet trade and protect animal welfare

      • Commission issues guidance for pragmatic and proportionate rules on protecting wild birds

    • Business
      • Give your career a real take off

      • Flagship projects on AI for grids and data centre sustainability

      • Europe for Aviation for more modern and efficient ATM in Europe

      • Commission seeks feedback on fisheries multiannual plans

      • Commission publishes 2025 report on the Digital Markets Act implementation

    • Defence
      • EDF’s first-ever FSTP sub-call attracts strong interest from newcomers to EU defence funding

      • EU signs Protocol amending the Council of Europe Convention on the prevention of terrorism strengthening global counter-terrorism efforts

      • UK aid cuts are a cautionary tale for Europe

      • Costa says EU needs a '360-degree' security vision

      • Borderless innovations: EU security event in Narva

    • Human Rights
    • Opinion
    • Online TV
    • Online Radio
    • Contact

EU

Revive #TTIP, as EU retaliation aids Trump's re-election

SHARE:

Published

8 years ago

on

June 14, 2018

By

Guest Contributor - Opinion

We use your sign-up to provide content in ways you've consented to and to improve our understanding of you. You can unsubscribe at any time.

The EU's Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmström (pictured) has made a cardinal error in opting to play US President Donald Trump at his own game. A tit-for-tat trade war across the Atlantic will be lose-lose for both sides, and worse than that, Brussels' panicky imposition of "balancing" tariffs on some American products greatly improves Trump's chances of a second term in the White House, writes Founder and Chairman of Friends of Europe Giles Merritt.  

The storm of European protests and vituperation that preceded the EU's retaliation was a waste of time. Trump’s focus is November's mid-term congressional elections. Hitting at goods produced in politically sensitive states and congressional districts will create an even more combative mood amongst the blue collar workers whose support is vital for him.

The question now is how can level heads on both sides of the Atlantic save the relationship from becoming uglier. Is it too late to correct the European Commission's mistake, and instead create a calmer and more constructive climate of opinion in America and Europe?

First things first; Trump has picked the wrong fight with the wrong people, and that in itself may offer a way out. The shared problem facing the US and EU isn't transatlantic rivalries for jobs and profits. It's the threat of increasingly tough competition from Asia, notably China. Getting that back onto the transatlantic agenda is key, and could do much to lower the temperature.

There's already much lost ground to be recovered because we've come a long way from the glory days of US-EU cooperation. Ten years ago, the role of the EU's ambassador to Washington DC was to underpin America's most influential politicians. Now it is to undermine them.

When former Irish prime minister John Bruton arrived there in 2004 as EU ambassador, he transformed the post from the largely technocratic to the overtly political. For five years he criss-crossed the US to give valuable support and credibility to Congressmen and Senators, and Europe reaped rich rewards.

The EU Mission's current role has been to identify targets for retaliatory protectionism, like Bourbon whiskey from Kentucky and Wisconsin's Harley-Davidson motorcycles.

Trade is of far less importance than investment, which is where both sides now risk lasting harm. Two-way trade in goods across the Atlantic runs at about half a trillion dollars a year, with services worth another trillion. This trade is dwarfed, however, by corporate investments that currently represent over $20 trillion in assets.

Advertisement

European companies account for about three-quarters of all foreign investment in America, while two-thirds of all US investment abroad is in Europe. If mutual confidence across the Atlantic starts to be destroyed, the economic consequences would be disastrous.

Europe's response to Trump's trade war should have been to avoid precipitate retaliation. The Democrats have a chance of winning back a narrow majority in the House of Representatives in November, and that will be severely compromised once a US-EU trade war is unleashed.

The Republicans' loss of the House, and even of the Senate although that seems less likely, would bring Trump's iconoclastic 'America First' drive to a stuttering halt.

The tactic now available to Brussels is to move for a revival of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) that both sides abandoned in the dying days of the Obama Administration. The EU obviously has to respond to Trump's unilateral protectionism, but it must do so with an olive branch rather than a sword.

Europe's corporate chieftains should lead the way by backing an EU-led revival of TTIP as the way to defuse mounting tensions. That wouldn't happen overnight, but the simple act of proposing it would rob Trump of the initiative and of a war cry at America's crucial mid-term elections.

Share this article:

Share this:
Related Topics:Featuredfull-image
Guest Contributor - Opinion

Opinions expressed are purely those of the author and not endorsed by EU Reporter. The article was unsolicited by EU Reporter, and the author guarantees the truthfulness of the contents of the article. No payment was made by EU Reporter to the author

EU Reporter publishes articles from a variety of outside sources which express a wide range of viewpoints. The positions taken in these articles are not necessarily those of EU Reporter. Please see EU Reporter’s full Terms and Conditions of publication for more information EU Reporter embraces artificial intelligence as a tool to enhance journalistic quality, efficiency, and accessibility, while maintaining strict human editorial oversight, ethical standards, and transparency in all AI-assisted content. Please see EU Reporter’s full A.I. Policy for more information.
Up Next

UK minister resigns over #Brexit policies

Don't Miss

First step towards limiting #CO2Emissions from trucks

Advertisement

You may like

  • Greenlanders reject US rule: EU officials stress sovereignty and strategic autonomy

  • The future for Bangladesh is looking increasingly uncertain

  • Thirty-three years of partnership: A relationship that has come of age

  • Popular
  • Latest
  • Videos
Law5 days ago

EU Cybersecurity Act could expose member states to costly investment treaty claims, legal opinion warns

Kazakhstan2 days ago

Kazakhstan cuts water use by 874 mln m³ through new technologies

Health4 days ago

Impasse in European Union Tobacco Tax Reform: The Swedish veto

San Marino4 days ago

Inconvenient questions about Andorra and San Marino that Brussels should be asking

Health5 days ago

Várhelyi says unilateral measures by the US against the EU ‘would not be justified’

General4 days ago

How digital wallets are changing the way Welsh consumers pay for online services

Maritime2 days ago

Europe's peripheral and maritime regions 'combine many territorial assets', meeting told

Belgium2 days ago

Record breaking Belgian sailors making more waves

Russia5 hours ago

Western investors eye Russian assets again as sanctions discounts persist

Green Week6 hours ago

EU green jobs: Which activities employ the most people?

Eurostat6 hours ago

Podcast: The story behind data on hazardous chemicals

Labour7 hours ago

EU's labour productivity slightly increased in Q1 2026

EU7 hours ago

Government gross debt of eurozone largely in euro

Gender equality8 hours ago

Commission calls for equal pay rules to become a reality across the EU

Ukraine8 hours ago

EU disburses nearly €2.8 billion to support Ukraine's financial stability and reform efforts

Health17 hours ago

EU Drugs Agency warns of new health risks, including a rising trend in ketamine use

Kazakhstan2 months ago

Kazakhstan reforms under scrutiny at Brussels Press Club round table

Japan5 months ago

Japan should face up to history and contribute more to regional peace

Kazakhstan7 months ago

Ambassador calls for 'speeding up' of co-operation between EU and Kazakhstan

World10 months ago

Timur Turlov at Smart Moves Summit 2025: How chess can transform global education

Ukraine1 year ago

Shevtsova’s case: Out-of-court sanctions dismantling trust in Ukrainian cause

Transport1 year ago

The future of European transport

Politics1 year ago

Trump Vs Trueman

US1 year ago

US 'no longer' an 'unconditional ally' for Europe - MEP

  • 6,628Followers
  • 4,936Likes

Trending

  • Law5 days ago

    EU Cybersecurity Act could expose member states to costly investment treaty claims, legal opinion warns

  • Kazakhstan2 days ago

    Kazakhstan cuts water use by 874 mln m³ through new technologies

  • Health4 days ago

    Impasse in European Union Tobacco Tax Reform: The Swedish veto

  • San Marino4 days ago

    Inconvenient questions about Andorra and San Marino that Brussels should be asking

EU Reporter
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies Policy
  • AI Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Contact

Copyright © 2026 EU Reporter. All rights reserved.