EU suspends implementation of Turnberry trade deal with Trump

The US Supreme Court has ruled most of Donald Trump's tariffs illegal, casting doubt on the Turnberry agreement signed in July 2025. The European Parliament has suspended its implementation pending clarifications from Washington. Trump has threatened higher tariffs if the ruling is exploited.

The Turnberry agreement, negotiated in July 2025 at the Turnberry golf course in Scotland, was secured under the threat of a 30% US surtax on imports. Donald Trump obtained the removal of EU tariffs on American industrial products in exchange for a 15% minimum tariff on most European exports to the United States. Commission President Ursula von der Leyen was summoned there by Trump, who boasted of having signed 'the greatest deal ever'.

Seen as a capitulation for Europe, this transatlantic framework agreement immediately sparked outrage, described as a 'disgrace' and 'humiliation'. Last Friday, the US Supreme Court, in a 6-3 decision, invalidated much of these 'reciprocal' tariffs imposed on the European Union, Canada, Mexico, and other countries.

In response, the European Parliament announced on Monday the suspension of the agreement's implementation, awaiting clarifications from Washington. Trump reacted by the end of the day, warning that any attempt to exploit the judicial decision would result in 'much higher' tariffs. The fate of this deal remains uncertain as Europe considers potential retaliatory measures.

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President Trump signs 10% global tariff executive order hours after Supreme Court ruling strikes down prior tariffs.
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Trump signs 10% global tariff after supreme court ruling

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The US Supreme Court ruled that President Donald Trump's tariffs imposed under the 1977 IEEPA law were unlawful. Hours later, Trump signed an executive order imposing a 10% global tariff on all countries under Section 122 of the 1974 Trade Act. The tariff will take effect almost immediately and last for 150 days.

France urges a united European Union response and Germany plans talks with allies after US President Donald Trump raised his global tariff to 15% on Saturday, defying a Supreme Court ruling that struck down his initial trade measures. The hike, effective immediately, targets major US partners including the EU, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan.

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The US Supreme Court issued a 6-3 decision on Friday ruling that President Donald Trump's tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act were unconstitutional. Trump responded by announcing new 10 percent global tariffs under a different statute, later raising them to 15 percent. The European Union has paused a recent trade deal with the US amid the resulting uncertainty.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 on Friday that President Trump cannot use the International Economic Emergency Powers Act to impose broad-scale tariffs, prompting immediate responses from the administration and political figures. Trump signed a 15% global tariff under a different law the next day and criticized the court on Monday. The decision has sparked debates over its political implications ahead of the midterms and the State of the Union address.

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Following the US Supreme Court's ruling against President Trump's IEEPA tariffs, his subsequent 15% global tariffs under alternative authority provide India new leverage in US trade talks, potentially aligning with its India-EU FTA ambitions.

A US court ruling on tariffs has lowered effective duties, easing tensions and steering the upcoming April summit between Xi Jinping and Donald Trump towards stability rather than escalation. Analysts say the decision strengthens China's negotiating position, with the summit expected to focus on extending a fragile truce rather than major concessions.

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President Donald Trump has warned of 100% tariffs on Canada if it pursues trade deals with China, creating early tensions in the upcoming T-MEC review this year. The threat follows a limited agreement between Canada and China that cuts tariffs on food products and electric vehicles. Canadian officials maintain the deal aligns with T-MEC obligations.

 

 

 

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