It's legacy time.
Ursula von der Leyen now has 18 days to keep Donald Trump from slapping European exporters with a 30% tariff after he upped the ante over the weekend.
Make no mistake: Failure to secure better terms by the 1 August deadline would be disastrous for the EU’s economy. The fact that Trump's escalation triggered little more than a whimper from Brussels over the weekend illustrated the degree to which von der Leyen's 'don't poke the bear' strategy has failed.
Instead of engaging with Trump directly, von der Leyen relied on her best man – Maroš Šefčovič, a Slovak-born former communist who has made a career in Brussels as his country's forever commissioner.
Šefčovič is a nice guy by all accounts but he crashed and burned. Barring a last minute reversal by Washington, which seems unlikely, von der Leyen's decision to hand full negotiating power to Šefčovič looks to have been a massive fiasco.
Which raises the question: Where was Ursula? Von der Leyen vowed to only to go go to Washington when a “concrete” deal was ready. Well, it's ready alright.
European trade ministers are due to meet in Brussels today, following a Sunday gathering of ambassadors, who strongly supported von der Leyen’s decision to keep a €21 billion retaliation package in the freezer until August 1, Euractiv's Thomas Møller-Nielsen tells me. The Commission will also present ministers with a separate list of countermeasures targeting roughly €72 billion worth of US exports, EU diplomats said.
"Both packages will be locked and loaded and ready to be used in early August, if negotiations don’t yield an acceptable outcome,” said an EU diplomat.
But if the EU isn’t willing to use the smaller retaliation package now, how credible is the larger threat? And remember, that package – designed as a response to 25% steel and aluminium tariffs – did not change after Trump bumped up those tariffs to 50%, mid-negotiations.
Trump, as ever, appears to have escalation dominance. |