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Pushback on Trump tariffs gathers steam, Mexico rejects bid to split NAFTA

Reuters  |  WASHINGTON/MEXICO CITY 

By Susan and Gomez

WASHINGTON/CITY (Reuters) - Republican lawmakers stepped up calls for to pull back from proposed tariffs on and aluminum imports as key trading partner rejected a bid by to drive a wedge between it and in talks to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Few details have emerged from the over the scope and timing of Trump's tariffs - 25 percent on imports and 10 percent on aluminum - after a surprise announcement by the last week.

Financial markets have rallied off their lows on expectations the measures may be watered down in the face of an intense lobbying effort from leading Republicans, although so far Trump has stuck to his guns in public.

On Tuesday, Mark Meadows, the of the Freedom Caucus, a staunchly conservative Republican grouping in Congress, raised concerns about the impact of the tariffs on American and agriculture. Agriculture is a potential target for retaliatory tariffs from if Trump pushes ahead.

Meadows, who spoke to reporters after a closed-door meeting with House Republicans, said he had heard little support for the tariffs. "Most of the conversation I heard was not in support of that particular decision."

Those comments came after sharp criticism of the tariffs from and who both on Monday issued statements critical of the proposals. Walker heads the Republican Study Committee, which has about 150 members, a majority of the party's lawmakers in the House.

Legislators and industry groups opposed to the duties have warned that the proposed tariffs would cause more damage to American companies and workers than they would help. They also note that the move would hit key allies such as hardest, rather than having a direct impact on global dumping of and aluminum by

"We fear that the proposed tariff may do more harm than good, hurting rather than helping the 97 percent of aluminum industry jobs in mid-and-downstream production processes," the said in a statement on Tuesday.

Members of the administration have repeatedly said that the cost of the tariffs will be minimal for American consumers. said they would add less than $200 to the cost of a car, for example.

Opponents have fought back, saying that consumers would end up paying more for a wide range of goods from cars, to canned beer and canned soup.

FIRES BACK

on Monday said that if and agreed to their demands in the NAFTA talks, they could be exempted from the and aluminum tariffs. The trilateral talks have gone on for six months with few signs of progress.

Mexico's raised the prospect of reprisals if pushed ahead with tariffs and insisted NAFTA remain "a trilateral accord" in response to a U. S. proposal to hold talks with and separately.

"There's a list (of U.

S. products) that we are analyzing internally, but we won't make it public, we're going to wait," Guajardo told the network in an interview.

has also said it would take counter-measures over the and aluminum tariffs, without specifying what it would do. The has identified industries it would target, including motorbikes, which are made in Wisconsin, Paul Ryan's state.

Despite the pressure, Trump and the administration have stood firm in public comments. They say that exemptions for specific countries to the tariffs would only allow - whose huge plant expansions have driven a global glut of and aluminum - to skirt the duties by exporting through third countries.

Trump has vowed to cut America's trade deficit and accuses countries like of cheating. He has launched an investigation into intellectual property abuses by China, a move that could dwarf any impact of the and aluminum proposals and trigger a sharp response from

Fred Bergstein, who has held top economics posts in a series of U. S. administrations and is a senior fellow at the for International Economics thinktank, warned on Tuesday that the proposed tariffs would undermine Washington's efforts to rein in by alienating potential allies.

"Trump's recent trade actions, especially the announced plans to impose tariffs on and aluminum, will have little effect on In fact, they will make confronting with an alliance of trading partners much harder," he said.

(Additional reporting by Jason Lange, and Richard Cowan; Writing by David Chance; Editing by Susan Thomas)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, March 07 2018. 01:52 IST
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