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President Donald Trump threatened to impose a 200% tariff on wine, champagne and other alcoholic beverages from France and elsewhere in the European Union, the latest escalation in a brewing transatlantic trade war.

The president in a social media post on Thursday said that he would move forward with the import duties if Brussels follows through with a tax on American whiskey exports, a measure aimed at retaliating against Trump’s steel and aluminum tariffs that went into effect on Wednesday.

“If this Tariff is not removed immediately, the U.S. will shortly place a 200% Tariff on all WINES, CHAMPAGNES, & ALCOHOLIC PRODUCTS COMING OUT OF FRANCE AND OTHER E.U. REPRESENTED COUNTRIES,” Trump said about the pending levies on bourbon. “This will be great for the Wine and Champagne businesses in the U.S.”

Shares in European makers of alcoholic beverages fell, with LVMH, which owns champagne houses Moët & Chandon and Veuve Clicquot, down as much as 2.2%. Cognac producer Remy Cointreau SA dropped 4.5% and spirits maker Pernod Ricard declined 3.6%.

Trump is “escalating the trade war he chose to unleash,” Laurent Saint-Martin, France’s trade minister, wrote in a post on X. “We will not give in to threats and will always protect our industries.”
US equity markets on Wednesday posted some gains after weeks of volatility and losses, and futures on Thursday were lower.

In response to Trump’s metals tariffs, the EU is planning countermeasures with duties on as much as €26 billion ($28.3 billion) worth of American products.

The EU will also immediately begin consultations with member states, with the aim of adopting the additional lists of agricultural and industrial goods subject to tariffs as high as 25% by mid-April.

Lutnick, who said he plans to speak to EU officials later Thursday said that hopefully, “they’ll realize that they should take these things down.”

A spokesman for the EU confirmed that calls are planned.

Trump has also pledged yet another round of tariffs in just three weeks, saying he’ll begin rolling out so-called reciprocal duties. The White House plans to apply an across-the-board rate to each country, based on a calculation of their own tariffs and other trade barriers, such as digital taxes or value-added levies. 

That threatens to further ignite the trade war, forcing countries to retaliate in ways that could spur Trump to add more levies of his own under the mantle of reciprocity. The president is also pledging separate sectoral tariffs on industries including autos, lumber, semiconductors, pharmaceuticals and copper.

The president has enacted his sweeping tariff agenda in a piecemeal fashion, a strategy that has been punctuated by uncertainty, including delays, reversals and changes in direction. Trump on Tuesday threatened to double a forthcoming tariff on Canada and backed down hours later when Ontario paused an export surcharge on electricity.

The use of tariffs as leverage in economic and geopolitical disputes is weighing on markets. The S&P 500 Index has dropped nearly 10% from a February high, raising fears of a recession. 

Trump — who during his first term repeatedly touted stock surges as validation of his policies — has shrugged off the fallout, saying this week the selloff was a buying opportunity and necessary to remake American industry and supply chains. Support for his tariff barrage is tepid at best, with many industry groups urging exemptions and economists warning of cascading fallout across the economy.

Trump during his first term pledged to enact sweeping tariffs on French wine over Paris’ tax posture toward US technology companies, but later retreated from that threat after he reached a truce with French President Emmanuel Macron.

Bloomberg News Albertina Torsoli reports.
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36 Comments

  1. Simple solution for EU is to remove the tariffs on whisky/bourbon then remove them from the shelves. Red tape everything America sells into 6 months or more wait, cancel military contracts with USA.

  2. US TARIFFS THREATS – 2025 $$

    Fearful of our own job loss & income,

    while the newscasts get more hopeless & graphic.

    Worrying about crime, taxes, tariffs & paying next month’s bills.

    It's no wonder we drink, smoke, pray & pop pills.

    By = Tom Zart

  3. In Europe we make, by far, the best wines in the world, not to mention the other excellencies like Scots or Irish Whiskies, German, Belgian or Czechs beers. The world is a big place full of people who loves good drinks. We can live without the US consumers. Someone should tell it to that mentally challenged orange idiot.

  4. Trumps impulsive, Egomaniacal, self sabotaging approach to economic policy has thrown the American economy into the toilet. Trump knows NOTHING about trade, Economics, and obviously diplomacy.

  5. The rest of the world can replace anything American with a domestic product or from another free trade country.

  6. I live in S. France, the idiot has no idea over quality and pricing. I can get " out the wall" wine for 50 cents a ltr. A good and drinkable wine for 2 dollar. Course if you have too much money you will pay 100 dollar a bottle. The consumer is king not Trump. In the meantime away thing American is boycotted and Tesla torched…..

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  8. It's generally the rich who drink European wine anyway… I think people will still dish out the tariffed cost for champagne on special occassions… big whoop. The US loses that fight.

  9. Good news for the world,we the ones who don’t live in the land of the bully will buy all those nice wines and no tariffs

  10. You can only make champagne in France, and it's a luxury item – all this does is give it more publicity and a more exclusive label

  11. How dare he put a tariff on champagne?! This is a direct attack on the working poor who drink champagne everyday! This totally doesn’t only affect millionaires and billionaires.

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