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US Considers $3.1 Billion in Tariffs for EU Imports

NY State Senator Introduces Bill Banning State Employees From Using TikTok

New York State Senator Chris Jacobs has introduced a new bill proposing to ban state employees from downloading and using the Chinese video-sharing app TikTok on their government-issued phones. “On the surface TikTok appears to be a harmless tool for creating short videos with music when in reality it is a data mining instrument that violates our privacy and could threaten our security,”  Jacobs said in a June 22 press release from his office. He added: “It is just too easy for the information it collects to be accessed by the oppressive Chinese government waging a fierce economic war against our state and our country.” The bill, named “No TikTok on Government Devices Act” (S8600), was introduced by Jacobs last Thursday. It would add new language to section 103 of…

US Considers $3.1 Billion in Tariffs for EU Imports

The United States is considering a raft of new tariffs on British and European Union imports as a dispute over EU subsidies to aircraft manufacturer Airbus threatens to morph into a trans-Atlantic trade war. A notice detailing the goods in question was posted by the Office聽of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) this week.

The notice (pdf) is filed as the “Enforcement of U.S. WTO Rights in Large Civil Aircraft Dispute,” as the World Trade Organization found that the European Union had been supplying illegal subsidies to Airbus SE. The goods in question have an estimated 2018 import trade value of $3.1 billion.

Items as diverse as decaffeinated coffee, metal-working tools, and trucks with lifting equipment are being considered for the imposition of new tariffs, while Italian-style cheeses, non-military helicopters, luxury handbags, wooden tool handles, and camera lenses are being considered for additional duties. The USTR is inviting public comments on whether specific items should be removed from the list鈥攐r the tariff increased “up to a level of 100 percent,” effectively doubling the price of the products to U.S. consumers.

Aircraft Subsidy Conflict

In a complex and long-standing dispute between the United States and the EU on subsidies to aircraft manufacturers Boeing and Airbus, the WTO ruled in October that given the EU’s illegal aid to Airbus, the Trump administration had the right to retaliate against European imports worth around $7.5 billion. However, the WTO is poised to hear a related case where the EU accuses the United States of unfairly subsidizing American aircraft giant Boeing.

US Considers $3.1 Billion in Tariffs for EU Imports An Airbus A350-1000 and an Airbus A330 NEO are seen during the 53rd International Paris Air Show at Le Bourget Airport near Paris, France, on June 17, 2019. (Pascal Rossignol/Reuters)

The USTR notice said that “In connection with this review, the U.S. Trade Representative is considering modifying the list of products of certain current or former EU member States that currently are subject to additional duties.”

The notice is to be published in the Federal Register on Friday, and comments must be submitted by July 26.

According to the notice, the measure leaves the door open to “achieving a mutually satisfactory solution.” However, the public is also encouraged to consider whether聽maintaining or imposing additional tariffs on the products of current or former EU States “would cause disproportionate economic harm to U.S. interests, including small or medium-size businesses and consumers.”

Focus News: US Considers $3.1 Billion in Tariffs for EU Imports

House Will Debate the Great American Outdoor Act in July

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) announced Monday that the House will debate and may vote to amend the Great American Outdoors Act, which would inject billions to maintain neglected national parks and permanently fund land and water conservation efforts. “The House will consider the Great American Outdoors Act under a rule on the floor during the work period at the end of July.  This bipartisan bill, which passed the Senate by a vote of 73–25, will permanently fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) and address the maintenance backlog at our national parks,” Hoyer said in a press statement. The Senate passed the legislation with bipartisan support last week, and it also has bipartisan support in the House. Hoyer said he will bring up the measure under regular rules that…