Donald Trump says he will impose 25% tariffs on all steel and aluminium imports into the US, including from Canada and Mexico.
The president said he would make the announcement on Monday, signalling yet another major escalation in his trade policy overhaul.
Speaking on Air Force One as he flew from Florida to New Orleans for the Super Bowl, he said the new levies would be on top of existing metals duties.
“Any steel coming into the United States is going to have a 25% tariff,” Mr Trump told reporters on Sunday.
When asked about aluminium, he responded, “aluminium, too” will be subject to the trade penalties.
Share prices in steelmakers in Asia were mostly down on Monday, apart from those with operations in the US.
What does Trump’s steel tariff mean for the UK?
At the moment UK exporters of steel and aluminium, are able to export tariff-free to the US up to specified volumes.
For steel, up to 500,000 metric tonnes can be exported to the US per year duty-free.
For aluminium, up to 21,600 metric tonnes can be exported to the US per year duty-free.
In 2023, the UK exported 160,000 metric tonnes of steel to the US, according to UK Steel.
Trump has imposed steel tariffs before. In 2018, during his first term, he introduced tariffs of 25% and 10% respectively on certain imports of steel and aluminium to the US.
However, these were replaced with a tariff rate quota (TRQ) for the UK in 2022, allowing for duty free export.
It’s not clear yet if President Trump will allow for any exemptions but his language on Air Force One last night suggested not.
Mr Trump also said he will announce reciprocal tariffs on Tuesday or Wednesday, to take effect almost immediately, applying them to all countries and matching the tariff rates levied by each nation.
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“And very simply, it’s, if they charge us, we charge them,” Mr Trump said of the reciprocal tariff plan.
Australia seeks tariff exemption
Meanwhile, Canberra is pressing Washington for an exemption to the planned tariffs, with Australia’s trade minister Don Farrell saying its steel and aluminium to the US create “thousands of good-paying American jobs” and are key to shared defence interests.
Mr Farrell said his country was making the case for “free and fair trade, including access into the US market for Australian steel and aluminium” during meetings with the Trump administration.
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Mr Trump previously threatened 25% import taxes on all goods from Canada and Mexico, though he paused them for 30 days last week. At the same time, he proceeded to add 10% duties on imports from China.
Also last week, Mr Trump said tariffs on the European Union would be implemented “pretty soon”. When questioned about the UK, the president said Britain was “out of line” when it came to trade but he thought the situation could be “worked out” without the use of tariffs.
His latest comments on the presidential plane came just after German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said the EU was ready to respond “within an hour” if the US levied tariffs on European goods, highlighting the risks of an escalating trade war.
China’s retaliatory tariffs on some US exports are due to take effect on Monday, with no sign yet of progress between Beijing and Washington.
Image: Mr Trump signed a proclamation declaring 9 February 2025 as the ‘Gulf of America Day’. Pic: Reuters
‘Gulf of America Day’
Also on board Air Force One, Mr Trump signed a proclamation declaring 9 February 2025 as the first-ever “Gulf of America Day”.
One of the first executive orders the president signed was renaming the Gulf of Mexico.
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While signing the latest proclamation, he posed in front of a map with the newly changed name.
Trump reiterates desire to make Canada 51st state
In a separate interview earlier on Fox News, Mr Trump repeated calls to make Canada “the 51st state” as he reiterated his support for tech billionaire Elon Musk.
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Trump reiterates call for Canada to be the 51st state
When asked if he was serious about Canada being a 51st state, Mr Trump said: “I think Canada would be much better off.
“We lose $200bn a year with Canada. And I’m not going to let that happen. It’s too much.
“Why are we paying $200bn a year essentially in subsidy to Canada? Now, if they are a 51st state, I don’t mind doing it.”
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Image: Mr Trump has said he trusts the work Elon Musk is doing in improving government efficiency
He also continued to voice support for Mr Musk. The X owner is spearheading the US president’s efforts to cut costs and bureaucracy in government, which has already seen the US Aid Agency for International Development targeted.
Rachel Reeves has been urged by a think tank to cut national insurance and increase income tax to create a “level playing field” and protect workers’ pay.
The Resolution Foundation said the chancellor should send a “decisive signal” that she will make “tough decisions” on tax.
Ms Reeves is expected to outline significant tax rises in the upcoming budget in November.
The Resolution Foundation has suggested these changes should include a 2p cut to national insurance as well as a 2p rise in income tax, which Adam Corlett, its principal economist, said “should form part of wider efforts to level the playing field on tax”.
The think tank, which used to be headed by Torsten Bell, a Labour MP who is now a key aide to Ms Reeves and a pensions minister, said the move would help to address “unfairness” in the tax system.
As more people pay income tax than national insurance, including pensioners and landlords, the think tank estimates the switch would go some way in raising the £20bn in tax it thinks would be needed by 2029/2030 to offset increased borrowing costs, flat growth and new spending commitments. Other estimates go as high as £51bn.
Image: Torsten Bell appearing on Sky News
‘Significant tax rises needed’
Another proposal by the think tank would see a gradual lowering of the threshold at which businesses pay VAT from £90,000 to £30,000, as this would help “promote fair competition” and raise £2bn by the end of the decade.
The Resolution Foundation also recommends increasing the tax on dividends, addressing a “worrying” growth in unpaid corporation tax from small businesses, applying a carbon charge to long-haul flights and shipping, and expanding taxation of sugar and salt.
“Policy U-turns, higher borrowing costs and lower productivity growth mean that the chancellor will need to act to avoid borrowing costs rising even further this autumn,” Mr Corlett said.
“Significant tax rises will be needed for the chancellor to send a clear signal that the UK’s public finances are under control.”
He added that while any tax rises are “likely to be painful”, Ms Reeves should do “all she can to avoid loading further pain onto workers’ pay packets”.
The government has repeatedly insisted it will keep its manifesto promise not to raise income tax, national insurance or VAT.
A Treasury spokesperson said in response to the think tank report it does “not comment on speculation around future changes to tax policy”.
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Is Britain heading towards a new financial crisis?
Chancellor urged to freeze alcohol duty
Meanwhile, Ms Reeves has been urged to freeze alcohol duty in the upcoming budget and not increase the rate of excise tax on alcohol until the end of the current parliament.
The Scotch Whisky Association (SWA), UK Spirits Alliance, Welsh Whisky Association, English Whisky Guild and Drinks Ireland said in an open letter that the current regime was “unfair” and has put a “strain” on members who are “struggling”.
The bodies are also urging Ms Reeves “to ensure there will be no further widening of the tax differential between spirits and other alcohol categories”.
A Treasury spokesperson said there will be no export duty, lower licensing fees, reduced tariffs, and a cap on corporation tax to make it easier for British distilleries to thrive.
Leave retailers alone, Reeves told
This comes as the British Retail Consortium (BRC) warned that food inflation will rise and remain above 5% into next year if the retail industry is hit by further tax rises in the November budget.
The BRC voiced concerns that around 4,000 large shops could experience a rise in their business rates if they are included in the government’s new surtax for properties with a rateable value – an estimation of how much it would cost to rent a property for a year – over £500,000, and this could lead to price rises for consumers.
Latest ONS figures put food inflation at 4.9%, the highest level since 2022/2023.
The Bank of England left the interest rate unchanged last week amid fears that rising food prices were putting mounting pressure on headline inflation.
“The biggest risk to food prices would be to include large shops – including supermarkets – in the new surtax on large properties,” BRC chief executive Helen Dickinson said.
She added: “Removing all shops from the surtax can be done without any cost to the taxpayer, and would demonstrate the chancellor’s commitment to bring down inflation.”
Donald Trump has revealed that media mogul Rupert Murdoch and his son Lachlan could be part of a deal in which TikTok in the United States will come under American control.
The US president also namedropped Michael Dell, the founder and CEO of Dell Technologies, as a possible participant in the deal during an interview with Fox News, which is owned by the Murdochs.
“I think they’re going to be in the group. A couple of others. Really great people, very prominent people,” Mr Trump said. “And they’re also American patriots, you know, they love this country. I think they’re going to do a really good job.”
Mr Trump said that Larry Ellison, founder and CEO of software firm Oracle, was part of the same group. His involvement in the potential TikTok deal had previously been revealed.
Image: President Donald Trump speaking to reporters outside the White House. Pic: AP/Mark Schiefelbein
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Saturday that Oracle would be responsible for the app’s data and security, with Americans set to control six of the seven seats for a planned TikTok board.
This comes after Mr Trump said he and China’s Xi Jinping held a “very productive call” on Friday, discussing the final approval for the TikTok deal, much of which is still unknown.
Once confirmed, the deal should stop TikTok from being banned in the US after lawmakers decided it posed a security risk to citizens’ data.
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Officials warned that the algorithm TikTok uses is vulnerable to manipulation by Chinese authorities, who can use it to push specific content on the social media platform in a way that is difficult to detect.
Congress had ordered the app shut down for American users by January 2025 if its Chinese owner ByteDance didn’t sell its assets in the country – but the ban has been delayed four times by President Trump.
Mr Trump said on Sunday that he might be “a little prejudiced” about TikTok, after telling reporters on Friday: “I wasn’t a fan of TikTok and then I got to use it and then I became a fan and it helped me win an election in a landslide.”
After the call with Mr Xi, Mr Trump said in a Truth Social post: “We made progress on many very important issues, including Trade, Fentanyl, the need to bring the War between Russia and Ukraine to an end, and the approval of the TikTok Deal.”
Mr Trump later told reporters at the White House that Xi had approved the deal, but said it still needed to be signed.
Representatives for the Murdochs, Mr Dell and Mr Ellison have not yet commented on a potential TikTok deal.