The much-maligned tariffs on aluminum and steel imposed by the Trump administration actually saved American jobs and may be kept to counter China, Joe Biden’s Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told reporters.
“There is a place for tariffs” in Commerce’s policy toolkit, Raimondo told the White House press corps during a briefing on Wednesday, adding that “the 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum have in fact helped save American jobs in the steel and aluminum industries.”
Philip Melanchthon Wegmann on X (formerly Twitter): “The commerce secretary says of Trump’s steel and aluminum tariffs: “the 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum have in fact helped save American jobs in the steel and aluminum industries.” / X”
The commerce secretary says of Trump’s steel and aluminum tariffs: “the 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum have in fact helped save American jobs in the steel and aluminum industries.”
This was a reference to Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, under which President Donald Trump imposed tariffs of 25% on steel and 10% on aluminum imports back in 2018. Australia was exempted from the tariffs, while Canada and Mexico saw them removed in May 2019, as part of setting up the new USMCA trade deal.
Calling China’s economic activities “uncompetitive, coercive, underhanded” and “unfair,” Raimondo said she’d use every tool at her disposal to protect American workers from them – echoing Trump’s rhetoric that Democrats at the time denounced as xenophobic and counterproductive.
This is not the first time Raimondo has defended the steel and aluminum tariffs. In an MSNBC interview last month, she said they have been “effective.”
Officially, the Biden administration is still reviewing Trump-era tariffs. However, Biden’s Commerce Department has already imposed new aluminum tariffs on 18 countries last month, within hours of the Senate confirming Raimondo to lead it.
For all of the Democrats’ criticism of Trump using tariffs as a negotiation tool, they’ve done the exact same thing once in the White House. Last week, the US Trade Representative’s office (USTR) threatened the UK with tariffs after London introduced a 2% tax on the revenues of digital companies from British users – which mostly impacted US-based Big Tech.
The US Chamber of Commerce – which joined the Democrats in efforts to…