Trump’s tariffs on EU autos show US to be unreliable, says EU parliament’s trade committee chair

BRUSSELS, (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump’s ​announcement to increase tariffs on cars from ‌the EU shows that the U.S. is an unreliable trading partner, EU parliament’s ​trade committee chair Bernd Lange said ​on Friday.

“This latest move demonstrates just ⁠how unreliable the U.S. side ​is,” Lange said. “This is no way to ​treat close partners. Now we can only respond with the utmost clarity and firmness, drawing ​on the strength of our ​position.”

Lange said that Trump’s behaviour is “unacceptable”. He said ‌the ⁠EU was honouring a framework trade deal struck with the U.S. in Scotland last year which imposed a 15% ​import tariff ​on ⁠most EU goods, averting a bigger trade war.

He said the ​U.S. had repeatedly breached the ​agreement, “for ⁠example with over 400 products containing steel and aluminium, which are now ⁠subject ​to an average tariff ​of 26 percent”.

Reporting by Jan Strupczewski, Writing by ​Charlotte Van Campenhout, editing by Ros Russell