WSJ What’s News - EU Gets Tariff Deadline Extension
Episode Date: May 27, 2025A.M. Edition for May 27. President Trump gives the European Union a reprieve on his threat to impose 50% tariffs on June 1 if a trade deal isn’t reached. The WSJ’s Kim Mackrael in Brussels talks u...s through the negotiations. Plus, Trump weighs sanctions against Russia as Moscow pummels Ukraine with drones and missiles. And Canada’s new leader Mark Carney takes up the task of fixing the country’s relationship with Trump. Former Canadian diplomat Colin Robertson previews King Charles’s historic speech at the opening of parliament. Azhar Sukri hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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President Trump's patience wears thin as Russia pummels Ukraine with drones and missiles.
Plus, the EU gets a deadline extension for its trade talks with Washington,
and Canada's new leader takes up the task of fixing the country's relationship with Trump.
Our previous prime minister, who I think Trump initially liked
because he had the name and he's an attractive personality,
because he was seen to diss Trump behind his back,
that brought on his ire and the relationship never improved.
So Carney is very conscious of that.
It's Tuesday, May the 27th.
I'm Azhar Sukri for The Wall Street Journal, filling in for Luke Vargas.
Here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.
President Trump is weighing sanctions against Moscow this week
as he grows frustrated by Russian President Vladimir Putin's intensifying attacks on Ukraine,
which killed at least 12 people this weekend.
That's according to people familiar with Trump's thinking,
who added that the president is also growing tired with the slow pace of peace
negotiations and is considering abandoning them altogether if a final push doesn't work.
Here was the president on Sunday.
I'm not happy with what Putin's doing. He's killing a lot of people and I don't know what
the hell happened to Putin. I've known him a long time, always gotten along with him,
but he's sending rockets into cities and killing people
and I don't like it at all, okay?"
Just hours after Trump's comments on Sunday, Russia defied his calls for an end to the
bombardment by launching another aerial attack on Ukraine, this time its largest ever drone
and missile assault.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky denounced the strikes and called for fresh economic
sanctions against Russia, a step Trump had shown himself reluctant to take after his call last week
with Putin. President Trump says he will hold off on implementing punitive trade tariffs on European products until July 9. This weekend,
he walked back a recent threat to impose 50% levies on EU products by June 1 if the two
sides couldn't reach a trade deal. It came after a phone call from the European Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen requesting the extension. For its part, the EU said it agreed to fast track
the trade talks. Brussels reporter Kim McRaele has been tracking the negotiations. Kim, give
us an idea of just how important US-EU trade is on a global scale.
So the trade relationship is huge. The EU is the US's biggest trading partner and vice
versa. And if you think about it in terms of the importance is the US's biggest trading partner and vice versa. And if you think about
it in terms of the importance for the US economy, trading goods and services with the EU actually
accounted last year for almost 5% of the US's gross domestic products.
And the EU does have a pretty significant trade surplus with the US. Is that right?
Yeah, that is right. So this is an issue that President Trump raises quite a lot and clearly
a big concern for him. But President Trump tends to focus specifically on the goods trade
deficit that the US has with the EU. What that doesn't fully account for is that the
US actually has a services surplus. So, you combine both the goods trade and the services
trade, there is still for the US a deficit overall in trade with the EU, but it's a lot
smaller than what typically is raised by US trade officials.
Will Barron Aside from that trade imbalance, what are the
main sticking points in these negotiations?
Jennifer McElnay The Trump administration is coming at these
talks looking for some pretty significant
concessions from trading partners generally and from the EU. Some of what they're asking
for are changes to policy that the EU wouldn't tend to consider to be trade issues. One example
I think that people have probably heard about is European countries value added tax and
that's a consumption tax. It's not that different from a sales tax.
It's used throughout Europe and a lot of other countries, not used in the US.
Generally it's seen as a non-discriminatory tax, but it's been an issue that President
Trump has raised repeatedly as a major concern.
And it's something that European countries, governments rely on the value added tax for
a lot of their revenue.
So that's one of the sticking points.
And I think some of the others that we've seen come up are the EU's food safety rules.
President Trump sees those as in some cases a barrier to trade, to keeping US products
out and the EU's digital rules.
So in some cases we're talking about policies that have been developed at the EU level that
the EU is not really interested in just giving these up in these talks.
Another thing that seems to be frustrating Trump is the pace at which these talks are
moving. We've seen that the EU has promised to fast track them, but just how quickly,
realistically can we expect progress?
We haven't seen at this stage any signs of a real breakthrough right now, but we've got
a milestone coming up. There's a possibility of the US Trade Representative, Jameson Greer,
will probably be at the OECD meetings happening in Paris next week. That might be an opportunity
for him to have a meeting with the EU's Trade Commissioner. And then, you know, we've got
just now a few more weeks until July 9th. So there's a lot of recognition from the EU side anyway that
it is a crunch time to try to get a deal if one is to be gotten.
That was Brussels reporter Kim MacRaele. Kim, thank you so much.
Thank you.
Well, following Trump's tariff climb down, US stock futures are pointing to a higher
open after the long weekend, and
in other markets news, China's industrial profits rose 3% in April, accelerating from
a 2.6% rise the previous month.
The gains were likely helped by rerouting and front-loading by traders, hoping to get
ahead of rising trade tensions between Washington and Beijing.
And back in the US, we exclusively report that Southwest Airlines has set the fee it
will charge customers for their first checked bag at $35.
It'll start charging for checked luggage tomorrow.
And looking ahead to the rest of the week, Nvidia's earnings will take centre stage
tomorrow afternoon, while Salesforce will also be reporting. Then
on Friday we'll get a read on May consumer sentiment, plus the April edition of the
PCE prices index, the Fed's preferred measure of inflation. And later today, Elon Musk's
SpaceX is planning another test of its Starship, which it hopes to have ready for a Mars mission
by next year.
Coming up, Canada's new leader enlists royalty to sketch out his vision for the country and
send a message to Washington.
That story after the break.
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In Ottawa, Prime Minister Mark Carney's government will lay out its agenda today,
as Parliament reopens for the first time since Carney replaced Justin Trudeau and won the
general election. Canada's head of state,
Britain's King Charles, will be on hand to read the speech from the throne as Carney prepares to
take on the biggest threat facing Canada's economy in a generation and that is Donald Trump's trade
war. For more, our Daniel Bach spoke to Colin Robertson, a former Canadian diplomat and fellow
at the Canadian Global
Affairs Institute.
Colin, I wanted to start with that throne speech for our listeners who might not be
familiar with Canadian parliamentary procedure. What's the importance of the King being
on hand and is Carney trying to send a message here?
Carney is trying to send a message. Remember the throne speech is the vision statement
of a new government. So having King Charles and Queen
Camilla come over with all the pomp and circumstance and pageantry that we've inherited from the
Westminster-style system, this is going to get world attention. But really from Mark Carney's
perspective, there's an audience of one and that's Donald Trump, who more than anyone else appreciates
that stagecraft is statecraft. Now later today in that throne speech, we'll hear what the government is planning.
Carney has likened the current disruption in global trade to the period after the fall
of the Berlin Wall.
He managed the financial crisis and Brexit as a central banker.
So what's his plan to manage President Trump and this current challenge?
Well, they go together.
He says we have to redefine our relationship with the United States. It will
not be the same given the uncertainty and lack of reliability on both the trading partnership and
the security relationship. So it involves, first of all, getting our own house in order, and that
means reducing internal trade barriers. In many ways, we're still 13 different principalities.
It's a bit like the European Union before they became together.
And he set July 1st as, in a sense,
Liberation Day for Canada.
Then he wants to build, baby build, as he put it,
infrastructure so that we can get our goods
and services to market.
And then that will allow us to do trade diversification.
At the same time, he also wants to improve our defense,
again, for security reasons,
and put money into that.
And he's going to give people tax cut and build housing because we've taken in a lot
of immigrants and he continues to want us to attract the world's talents, but we've
got to do it in a way that it's not going to put pressures on housing, hospitals, and
education schools basically in Canada. You talked about how Carney will need to get Canada's own house in order to boost the economy,
but he's obviously hoping he can sort something out with the Trump administration as well.
What does his diplomatic playbook look like in that sense?
Well, it is diplomacy, and he's been very careful not to be critical of Donald Trump.
Our previous prime minister, who I think Trump initially liked
because he had the name and he's an attractive personality,
because he seemed to diss Trump behind his back,
that brought on his ire and the relationship never improved.
So Carney's very conscious of that,
but he's also keeping some distance and pointing out to Trump,
you've got to respect our sovereignty.
And part of that, of course, is inviting the King over
because he knows that Donald Trump
has an affection for the monarchy.
So having the king come over to Canada and reminding him that indeed Canada is a sovereign
different country and it's a kind of subtle message, but it will also send a message to
the world, especially given we're going to be hosting the G7 in a couple of weeks.
You touched on Carney being respectful of Trump.
He obviously went to Washington already and got the Gilded Oval Office treatment, not
the same treatment as Ukraine's president or South Africa's leader.
But Donald Trump seems to respect him as the president does Britain's leader, Keir Starmer.
How can the Canadian PM play that up in dealing directly with Trump?
Well, I think what he's trying to do is he's trying to find, in a sense, counterweights
to the United States
The first objective has got to be remember you can't change geography
nor would we want to the biggest market in the world is still the United States and having preferred access to the United States and
Having a security relationship as the most powerful military in the world makes an awful lot of sense
So that's the first objective but as Carney has, you've always got a plan for the worst.
So he's looking for alternatives, and you look first to your old partners. And that's
why he went to Paris and met with Emmanuel Macron, and then went to London to meet with
Shakir Starmor, and has pledged that Canada will be part of the Starmor-Macron coalition,
the willing to support Ukraine, talking with them on industrial defense cooperation and
production. And in terms of our trade diversification, we have transatlantic and
trans-pacific agreements, but we only use them to about 50 or 60% efficiency.
And so that's something that we'll have to do more of keeping in mind that it's
not governments that do trade, but business.
And so business in Canada has got to be encouraged to find business
opportunities, both in Europe and in the Indo-Pacific
and elsewhere, particularly in the Americas, where we also have 50 plus free trade agreements.
Colin Robertson, a career Canadian diplomat who is now with the Canadian Global Affairs
Institute.
Colin, thank you for your time.
Good to be with you, Daniel.
And that's it for What's News for this Tuesday morning.
Today's show was produced by Kate Bulevend and Daniel
Bach. Our supervising producer is Christina Rocker. And I'm Azhar Sukri for The Wall Street
Journal filling in for Luke Vargas. We'll be back tonight with a new show. Thanks for listening.