Too Many German Cars in The US - Drumpf

(CNN)President Donald Trump told French President Emmanuel Macron that the European Union is worse than China on trade during a conversation that portended the tense end to this year’s G7 summit.

In a meeting at the White House during the French president’s visit to Washingtonin April, Macron suggested the United States and France should work together to resolve shared trade problems with Beijing, prompting Trump to make his remark, a person in the room told CNN.

Trump told Macron during their meeting in Washington that there are too many German cars in the United States, the source previously told CNN. The source did not say Trump explicitly said he wanted all German-made cars out of the US. Trump focused his conversation with Macron on German trade for about 15 minutes in the one-hour meeting.

Trump has been on a tear about German trade and cars in particular, bringing up the issues with other European leaders with whom he has met over the last few months, the source said.

Trump calls for elimination of tariffs, end to US being world’s ‘piggy bank’

The details of the conversation, which Axios previously reported, come amid fears of a looming trade war over the Trump administration’s move to impose steep tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from the European Union, Canada and Mexico.

Those tensions boiled over during the G7 summit in Canada on Saturday, with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and European leaders reaffirming plans to institute retaliatory measures and Trump lashing out in response by refusing to endorse the group of industrialized nations’ communique.

That, in turn, prompted harsh reactions from European officials and members of Congress, including Republican Sen. John McCain, who said Americans would continue to stand with the nation’s historical allies.

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McCain to allies: ‘Americans stand with you, even if our president doesn’t’

“To our allies: bipartisan majorities of Americans remain pro-free trade, pro-globalization & supportive of alliances based on 70 years of shared values,” the Arizona senator tweeted. “Americans stand with you, even if our president doesn’t.”

Senior Trump aides escalated the rhetoric on Sunday morning’s news shows, with chief economic adviser Larry Kudlow calling Trudeau’s remarks “a betrayal” on CNN’s “State of the Union” and top trade adviser Peter Navarro saying on “Fox News Sunday” that “there’s a special place in hell” for the Canadian leader.

Trump, who is in Singapore for negotiations with North Korea, continued to rip into US trading partners late Sunday night Eastern Time, repeating complaints about the US trade deficit and contributions to NATO.

“Fair Trade is now to be called Fool Trade if it is not Reciprocal,” Trump wrote in a series of posts on Twitter. “According to a Canada release, they make almost 100 Billion Dollars in Trade with U.S. (guess they were bragging and got caught!). Minimum is 17B. Tax Dairy from us at 270%. Then Justin acts hurt when called out!”

“Why should I, as President of the United States, allow countries to continue to make Massive Trade Surpluses, as they have for decades, while our Farmers, Workers & Taxpayers have such a big and unfair price to pay?” the President continued. “Not fair to the PEOPLE of America! $800 Billion Trade Deficit … And add to that the fact that the U.S. pays close to the entire cost of NATO-protecting many of these same countries that rip us off on Trade (they pay only a fraction of the cost-and laugh!). The European Union had a $151 Billion Surplus-should pay much more for Military!”

“Why should I, as President of the United States, allow countries to continue to make Massive Trade Surpluses, as they have for decades, while our Farmers, Workers & Taxpayers have such a big and unfair price to pay?” the President continued. “Not fair to the PEOPLE of America! $800 Billion Trade Deficit … And add to that the fact that the U.S. pays close to the entire cost of NATO-protecting many of these same countries that rip us off on Trade (they pay only a fraction of the cost-and laugh!). The European Union had a $151 Billion Surplus-should pay much more for Military!”

It’s not clear why you responded to that particular part since you didn’t say anything, but you should know that they’re all lies. Verify before quoting Drumpf.

[SIZE=7]War of words between US and Western allies after G7 fiasco[/SIZE]
French, Canadian and German governments criticise Washington after conflict over international trade in G7 summit.

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Macron’s office called on Trump: ‘Let’s be serious and worthy of our people’

The United States and its Western allies have swung into a war of words and threats, risking a diplomatic and trade crisis, after US President Donald Trump abruptly rejected a previously agreed joint statement in the wake of a fractious Group of Seven (G7) summit in Canada.

Minutes after the publication on Saturday of a communique that was approved by the leaders of seven of the world’s most advanced economies - US, France, Germany, Japan, Britain, Italy and Canada - Trump announced on Twitter that he was retracting his support, which led to a series of tense remarks among the allies.

In a flurry of tweets from Air Force One, en route to Singapore for a historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on Saturday, Trump accused Justin Trudeau, Canada’s prime minister and host of the G7 summit, of being “very dishonest”.

He was reacting to Trudeau’s declaration that Canadians would “not be pushed around” and would hit back at punishing US tariffs on metal imports with “equivalent tariffs”.

[COLOR=rgb(226, 80, 65)]Trudeau also called the fact that the US had based the tariffs on a national security reason “kind of insulting”.

On Sunday, White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow accused Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of betraying Trump with “polarising” statements on trade policy that risked making the US leader look weak ahead of his meeting with Kim.

“[Trudeau] really kind of stabbed us in the back,” Kudlow said on CNN.

US trade adviser Peter Navarro echoed the same sentiment, telling Fox News that “there is a special place in hell for any leader that engages in bad faith diplomacy with President Donald J. Trump”.

Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland responded to the comments by saying that Canada will retaliate to US tariffs in a measured and reciprocal way and it will always be willing to talk.

“Canada does not conduct its diplomacy through ad hominem attacks … and we refrain particularly from ad hominem attacks when it comes from a close ally,” Freeland told reporters in Quebec City on Sunday.

[SIZE=6]‘Fits of anger’[/SIZE]

Earlier on Sunday, France warned that “fits of anger” cannot not dictate international cooperation.

“We spend two days working out a (joint) statement and commitments. We are sticking to them and whoever reneges on them is showing incoherence and inconsistency,” President Emmanuel Macron’s office said on Sunday in a statement to AFP news agency.

Trump pulls out of joint G7 statement, calls Trudeau ‘weak’

“Let’s be serious and worthy of our people. We make commitments and keep them,” the presidency said, adding that “France and Europe maintain their support for this (G7) statement”.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said EU will implement counter-measures against US tariffs on steel and aluminium, voicing regret about Trump’s abrupt decision to withdraw support for the communique.

“The withdrawal, so to speak, via tweet is of course … sobering and a bit depressing,” Merkel said in an ARD television interview following the G7 summit in Canada.

The Trump administration confirmed on May 31 it would apply additional tariffs on steel and aluminium imports from Canada, Mexico and European Union countries, ending a two-month exemption period.
In response, Canada, Mexico and the EU said they were putting in place their own retaliatory measures.

[SIZE=6]Allies will retaliate[/SIZE]

The now-rejected communique acknowledged the importance of “free, fair and mutually beneficial trade and investment”.

“We strive to reduce tariff barriers, non-tariff barriers and subsidies,” it said.

“This year’s G7 meeting is already going down as the G6 + 1, with six members on one side and President Trump on the other,” Al Jazeera’s John Hendren, reporting from Quebec, said.

“A meeting six of the leaders hoped would end by de-escalating a budding trade war ended up accelerating it.”

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

Germany will f*ck Trump, he messed with the wrong ones. I remember Obama saying the USA owes Germany alot of money.

My sister, go listen to Obama’s state of the nation or whatever they call it address. Go listen to what he said about Germany compared to USA