IMMIGRATION: WASHINGTON, D.C.: Border shutdown off, auto tariffs on — Trump

President Donald Trump speaks during the White House Opportunity and Revitalization Council meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House, Thursday, April 4, 2019, in Washington. AP

 

WASHINGTON, D.C.: Abandoning his threat to immediately seal the southern border, President Donald Trump warned instead on Thursday (Friday in Manila) that he’d slap tariffs on cars coming to the US from Mexico unless the Mexicans do more to stop the flow of migrants and drugs to the US.

In his latest backtrack in recent days, Trump told reporters he would try the “less drastic measure” before resorting to his standing border-closure threat.

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“Mexico understands that we’re going to close the border or I’m going to tariff the cars. I’ll do one or the other. And probably start off with the tariffs,” Trump said. He added later: “I don’t think we’ll ever have to close the border because the penalty of tariffs on cars coming into the United States from Mexico, at 25 percent, will be massive.”

It was the latest, seemingly sudden attempt at new leverage by a president struggling to solve what his administration has called a border “crisis.” And it was a dramatic departure for Trump, who last week tweeted that he would close the border or large swaths of it this week unless Mexico immediately halted “ALL illegal immigration
coming into the United States” — a seemingly impossible task.

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Trump said at the time that he was “not kidding around,” and his acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney said in a television interview Sunday that it would take “something dramatic” for Trump not to close down the crossings.

Since then, however, White House advisers, border city leaders and US economists have warned that such a move would have enormous economic consequences on both sides of the border, interrupting supply chains and boosting US consumer prices on everything from avocadoes to autos.

Trump in recent days has also backtracked on his push for Republicans to again take on healthcare and surprised his own Education secretary by reversing a plan to ax federal aid for the Special Olympics.

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Those actions have only added to longstanding concerns about whether Trump’s words can be trusted. Trump, who has long said his unpredictability was one of his greatest negotiating assets, has also followed through with some of his most bombastic threats, including forcing the country’s longest-ever government shutdown over border funding.

Trump had already appeared to be easing off his border threat earlier this week. Though he said Tuesday all options remained on the table, he shifted his goal posts, calling on Congress to pass immigration legislation to avert a closure and praising the Mexican government for doing more to apprehend migrants traveling through the country from Central America — though it’s unclear anything has changed.

Marcelo Ebrard, Mexico’s foreign relations secretary, said Tuesday his government had not changed its policies. And on Thursday, Mexico’s ambassador to the US Martha Barcena told The Associated Press the country was working to make its own border “more orderly,” but “migration would never be stopped.”

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Jesus Seade, the Mexican undersecretary for North America, also brushed off the threat of new tariffs, saying officials were “not concerned” and noting the tariffs were not part of the US-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement that the countries had agreed to but not yet ratified.

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