White House to showcase US products as trade battles loom
The White House will show off cookie cutters from Vermont, pepperoni rolls from West Virginia, jeans from Oklahoma, gun safes from Utah, snowboards from Colorado and livestock feed from Iowa.
US President Donald Trump will showcase American-made products ranging
from beef jerky and cowboy boots to the Lockheed Martin Corp F-35
fighter jet on Monday, as his administration wages trade battles on a
series of fronts. A White House spokeswoman said on Sunday that Trump
would make remarks at the exhibit designed to demonstrate the
administration’s “commitment to ensuring more products are made in
America.” Vice President Mike Pence, six Cabinet secretaries and some
dozen other senior officials will also attend.
The U.S. Commerce Department held a hearing on Thursday into its
investigation over whether imported vehicles and parts pose a national
security risk. All major automakers, including Ford Motor Co, which will
have an F-150 pickup truck on display at the White House exhibit,
oppose imposing vehicle and parts tariffs of up to 25 percent. Trump
told CNBC on Friday he was ready to impose tariffs on all $500 billion
of imported goods from China, threatening to escalate a clash over trade
policy that has unnerved financial markets. Washington has already
imposed 25 percent duties on $34 billion of Chinese imports and
threatened 10 percent tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods. China
has retaliated on $34 billion of U.S. goods.
Citing national security, Washington imposed tariffs on steel and
aluminum imports from the European Union, Canada and Mexico on June 1.
On Wednesday, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker will
meet with Trump. EU officials have dampened expectations about what
Juncker can achieve. The finance ministers for Mexico and Canada said on
Sunday they were optimistic about NAFTA talks with the United States,
even as trade tensions spurred by U.S. tariffs dominated the G20 meeting
of world economic leaders in Argentina.
Other products to be displayed at the White House on Monday include
Wiffle balls and bats from Connecticut, Viking Range LLC stoves from
Mississippi and Moon Pies sweets from Tennessee. The White House will
also show off cookie cutters from Vermont, pepperoni rolls from West
Virginia, jeans from Oklahoma, gun safes from Utah, snowboards from
Colorado and livestock feed from Iowa.
Lockheed Martin, which will display a model of the F-35 on the White
House lawn, will also showcase the Orion Spacecraft, “the cornerstone of
NASA’s future missions to the Moon, Mar
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