
Europe should activate countermeasures against Trump tariffs, lawmaker says
The EU had been negotiating intensively with Washington for more than three weeks and had made concessions, said Bernd Lange, the head of the European Parliament's trade committee.
The bloc had also suspended all countermeasures after the U.S. imposed an initial tariff of 20% on European imports in April.
"It is brazen and disrespectful to increase the tariffs on European goods announced on April 2 from 20% to 30%," Lange told Reuters.
"This is a slap in the face for the negotiations. This is no way to deal with a key trading partner," he added.
Europe should make it clear that these "unfair trade practices" were unacceptable, Lange said.
"We have postponed the first stage of our countermeasures for the time being, but I am firmly convinced that they must now be implemented immediately," he said.
"The first list of countermeasures must be activated on Monday as planned, and the second list should also follow quickly."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
12 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Trump news at a glance: Trump shocks EU and Mexico with tariffs as he gives Ice agents ‘total authorization' to protect themselves
Donald Trump has said he will impose tariffs of 30% on the European Union and Mexico from 1 August, threatening Europe that it would pay a price if it retaliated and telling Mexico it had not done enough to stop North America from turning into a 'Narco-Trafficking Playground'. 'If for any reason you decide to raise your Tariffs and retaliate, then, whatever the number you choose to raise them by, will be added onto the 30% that we charge,' he wrote in a letter to the EU. EU trade ministers will meet on Monday for a pre-arranged summit and will be under pressure from some countries to show a tough reaction by implementing €21bn ($24.6bn) in retaliatory measures, which they had paused until midnight the same day. Here are the key US politics stories at a glance: Donald Trump announced on Saturday that goods imported from both the European Union and Mexico will face a 30% US tariff rate starting 1 August, in letters posted on his social media platform, Truth Social. The tariff assault on the EU came as a shock to European capitals as the European Commission and the US trade representative Jamieson Greer had spent months hammering out a deal they believed was acceptable to both sides. Read the full story Donald Trump has given 'total authorization' to federal immigration agents to protect themselves after a series of clashes with protesters, including during enforcement raids on two California cannabis farms. 'I am giving Total Authorization for Ice to protect itself, just like they protect the Public,' Trump posted on Truth Social on Friday, adding that he was directing the homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, and border czar, Tom Homan, to arrest anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) protesters who impede immigration enforcement operations. Read the full story Recently departed officials from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) say the organization is dangerously underresourced and overstretched in the event of further natural catastrophes, as the cleanup continues from this month's torrential rain storms and flooding in Texas that left more than 120 dead. Read the full story FBI director Kash Patel has denied swirling resignation rumors over reported unhappiness at a justice department decision to close the book on Jeffrey Epstein after administration officials teased a big reveal earlier in the year. In a Saturday social media post, the agency director said: 'the conspiracy theories just aren't true, never have been. It's an honor to serve the President of the United States – and I'll continue to do so for as long as he calls on me.' Read the full story David Gergen, a veteran of Washington politics and an adviser to four presidents, Republican and Democrat, has died aged 83. As US regulators restrict Covid mRNA vaccines and as independent vaccine advisers re-examine the shots, scientists fear that an unlikely target could be next: cancer research. Catching up? Here's what happened on Friday 11 July.


Reuters
16 minutes ago
- Reuters
Australia and China: Trade flows and security tensions shape ties
SYDNEY, July 13 (Reuters) - Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese arrived in Shanghai on Saturday for a six-day visit to three Chinese cities where regional security tensions and economic ties are likely to dominate talks. Albanese's second visit to China, where he will meet President Xi Jinping, comes after Canberra stepped up screening of Chinese investment in critical minerals and as U.S. President Donald Trump rattles the global economy with sweeping import tariffs. Here is a timeline of relations between Australia and China over recent years: Nov 17, 2014 - Australia sealed a landmark free trade agreement with top trade partner China, concluding a decade of negotiations. It comes into effect in late 2015. Dec 5, 2017 - Australia, concerned about Chinese influence, announces a ban on foreign political donations to prevent external interference in its politics. Aug 23, 2018 - Australia bans Huawei Technologies from supplying equipment for its planned 5G broadband network, citing national security regulations. Apr 2020 - Australia seeks support for an international inquiry into the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic. China's then ambassador to Australia says that in response to the call, the Chinese public would boycott Australian wine, beef and tourism. Jun 9, 2020 - China urges students going overseas to think carefully before choosing Australia, citing racist incidents, threatening a $27.5 billion market for educating foreign students. Aug 2020 - Australian citizen Cheng Lei, a business anchor for Chinese state television in Beijing, is detained. Nov 27, 2020 - China announces temporary anti-dumping tariffs on Australian wine. Shipments of Australian live lobsters, timber and barley are also blocked or restricted around this time. China's embassy lists 14 grievances with Australia, including the blocking of 10 Chinese investments on national security grounds. May 22, 2022 - Australia's Labor Party, led by Albanese, wins the general election ending almost a decade of conservative rule. Nov 15, 2022 - Albanese meets Xi on the sidelines of the G20 in Indonesia. It is the first leaders' meeting since 2016. Jan 3, 2023 - China allows three government-backed utilities and its top steelmaker to resume coal imports from Australia. Aug 5, 2023 - China ends 80.5% tariffs on Australian barley. Oct 11, 2023 - China releases Australian journalist Cheng Lei after three years in a Beijing prison on national security charges. Oct 22, 2023 - China agrees to review dumping tariffs of 218% on Australian wine. Australia pauses WTO complaint. Nov 6-7, 2023 - Visiting Beijing, Albanese tells Xi and Premier Li Qiang that a strong relationship between the two countries was "beneficial into the future". Xi says stable bilateral ties served each other's interests and both countries should expand their cooperation. Jan 18, 2024 - Australia rejects comments by China's ambassador seeking to deflect blame from China's navy for the injury of Australian military divers in an incident near Japan in November. Feb 5, 2024 - A Beijing court hands Australian writer Yang Hengjun a suspended death sentence, opens new tab, five years after he was first detained in China and three years after a closed-door trial on espionage charges. Mar 29, 2024 - China lifts tariffs on Australian wine, triggering a surge in imports. Dec 3, 2024 - China lifts final restrictions on Australian beef. Dec 12, 2024 - Australia strikes rugby league funding deal with Papua New Guinea that is contingent on its Pacific Islands neighbour rejecting security or policing ties with China. Dec 26, 2024 - China resumes imports of Australian lobster. Feb 21, 2025 - Australia's Foreign Minister Penny Wong raises concerns with Chinese counterpart over inadequate notice given by the Chinese navy of a live-fire exercise in international waters between Australia and New Zealand that forced airlines to divert flights. May 3, 2025 - Albanese's Labor government is re-elected for a second term in national elections.


Daily Mail
30 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Family of Chinese scientist speaks out after she committed suicide amid probe into research
The family of Dr. Jane Wu, a renowned Chinese American neuroscientist who died by suicide last year, is speaking out for the first time, accusing Northwestern University of discrimination, retaliation, and abuse that they say drove her to take her own life. The family are now suing the institution that once championed her work, alleging it helped destroy both her career and her spirit. Dr. Wu, 60, a naturalized US citizen and longtime faculty member at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine, died in mid-2024, just months after her lab was shut down following a federal investigation into foreign ties - part of a broader government crackdown that disproportionately targeted Chinese researchers. Wu was never charged with any wrongdoing. The university, however, began limiting her activities, quietly winding down her influence while the investigation dragged on. Now, as the one-year anniversary of her death approaches, her daughter, Elizabeth Rao, is publicly demanding answers. 'As painful as it is for us as her family to recount how Northwestern treated her, we are seeking justice to prevent this from happening again to others in the future,' Rao said to NBC News. Wu spent nearly four decades in neuroscience, including almost 20 years at Northwestern. Her lab focused on tumor development, metastasis, and neurodegenerative diseases - research that had brought in significant federal funding, according to the family's lawsuit, filed last month. Her daughter also said how she a devoted mother and music lover who found joy in everything from Taiwanese pop icon Teresa Teng to country star Tanya Tucker. Yet in 2019 Wu became one of hundreds of US-based scientists investigated by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for alleged foreign influence - part of a sweeping national security campaign that has since drawn accusations of racial profiling. NIH Deputy Director Dr. Michael Lauer later defended the program stating, 'This is not xenophobic racism, this is not targeting and this is not stigma. This is real theft.' In Wu's case, her family said, there was 'no evidence of wrongdoing', yet despite that, Northwestern allegedly continued to punish her. 'NU did nothing to support her nor help lift the racial stigma placed over Dr. Wu despite her obvious innocence and the enormous funding her work had brought to NU,' the lawsuit states. Wu was left in professional limbo. Her family says that once the probe concluded in 2023 with no evidence of wrongdoing, instead of restoring her status, the university intensified its restrictions. The suit accuses Northwestern of systematically dismantling Wu's professional standing - limiting her research, reassigning her grants to white male colleagues, and isolating her from her team. The dean of the medical school slashed her salary and imposed new requirements to reinstate her funded status. Her team was broken up and her lab space diminished. Her grants were reassigned. Her legacy, her family says, dismantled piece by piece. After the university abruptly shut down her lab without explanation in May 2024, the emotional toll was devastating, the complaint says. According to the suit, Wu suffered a stress-induced stroke that damaged her vision. Still able to work, she clung to her research, but Northwestern allegedly used her emotional state as a 'pretext' to evict her. That same month, acting on the university's orders, police officers entered her campus office. Wu was handcuffed, forcibly removed, and involuntarily committed to Northwestern Memorial Hospital's psychiatric unit without notice to her family or consultation with outside physicians, the suit claims. 'The physical assault directed by NU and the forced hospitalization sent Dr. Wu into a severe state of shock,' the lawsuit states. Two weeks after her release, she died by suicide. In a statement Northwestern said it was 'deeply saddened' by her death but 'vehemently denies' the allegations. The school added it plans to file a motion to dismiss the case by early September and has declined to comment further. Wu's death is now being cited by advocacy groups as a chilling example of the fallout from what they describe as discriminatory federal scrutiny of Chinese American scientists. The NIH acknowledged in December 2024 that its efforts had created 'a difficult climate for our valued Asian American, Asian immigrant and Asian research colleagues who may feel targeted and alienated.' Gisela Perez Kusakawa, executive director of the Asian American Scholar Forum, issued a statement condemning the university's alleged actions. 'Universities must be places of community, support, and fairness, not fear and coercion,' she said. Beyond the legal battle, Wu's daughter wants the public to remember her mother as more than just a brilliant scientist. 'She made sure that my brother and I had got not only a great education but also got to do all the stuff of a quintessential American childhood,' Rao recalled. 'Sports, road trips, dance classes, choir, you name it.' Rao told of a home life filled with movie nights, road trips, and singalongs, in stark contrast to the 'tiger mom' stereotype. 'She turned simple houses into warm homes,' Rao said, adding how the family are determined to shine a light on what happened - not just for justice, but to ensure other scientists don't meet the same fate. 'We carry this with us: her upstanding morals and conviction to fight against injustice,' she said. The lawsuit is still in early stages but seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages. For Rao, it's not just about financial redress but vindicating her mother's name, her legacy, and the thousands of scientists like her who may suffer in silence. If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline offers 24/7, free and confidential support at 988 or by texting 988.