Saturday, September 27, 2025 - US President Donald Trump on Thursday night reignited his global trade war with the announcement of sweeping new tariffs, targeting pharmaceuticals, heavy trucks, home renovation fixtures and furniture in one of the most aggressive protectionist moves of his presidency.
The late-evening declaration marks the most severe trade
policy measure since April, when Trump stunned Washington and its allies with
reciprocal tariffs imposed on nearly every United States trading partner.
In a post on his Truth Social platform, the Republican
president revealed that beginning October 1, “we will be imposing a 100% Tariff
on any branded or patented Pharmaceutical Product, unless a Company IS BUILDING
their Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Plant in America.”
The new restrictions immediately triggered backlash from
abroad, with American ally Australia voicing sharp concerns. Canberra exported
pharmaceutical products valued at an estimated $1.35 billion to the United
States in 2024, according to figures from the United Nations Comtrade Database.
Australian health minister Mark Butler, speaking on Friday,
warned that the higher duties were “not in the American consumers’ interest …
particularly given the degree to which their exporters to Australia benefit
from that free trade as well.”
In a separate social media statement, Trump also unveiled a
25 percent tariff on “all ‘Heavy (Big) Trucks’ made in other parts of the
world” to shield US-based manufacturers such as Peterbilt, Kenworth,
Freightliner, Mack Trucks and others.
Foreign competitors including Sweden’s Volvo and Germany’s
Daimler, which owns the Freightliner and Western Star brands, immediately felt
the impact. Shares in both companies sank sharply in after-hours European
trading, reflecting investor unease.
Trump insisted the truck tariffs were justified “for many
reasons, but above all else, for National Security purposes!”
The decision follows a Section 232 investigation initiated
earlier this year into imported trucks. The rarely used trade law provision
allows the US president broad discretion to impose tariffs or restrictions if
imports are deemed a threat to national security. Trump has repeatedly relied
on Section 232 powers to justify tariffs as part of his pledge to revive
domestic manufacturing while punishing what he calls unfair foreign practices.
Not stopping there, Trump targeted the home renovation and
furniture sectors. He declared that “a 50% Tariff on all Kitchen Cabinets,
Bathroom Vanities and associated products” will take effect October 1,
alongside “a 30% Tariff on Upholstered Furniture.”
Industry data underscores the potential consequences.
According to the United States International Trade Commission, imports, primarily
from Asia, accounted for 60 percent of all furniture sold in 2022,
including 86 percent of wood furniture and 42 percent of upholstered pieces.
Following Trump’s announcement, shares of home furniture
retailers Wayfair and Williams Sonoma, both heavily reliant on imported
products, tumbled in after-hours trading.
Economists warned that the tariff escalation risks fueling
inflationary pressures in the US economy, which remains the world’s largest but
is highly sensitive to import costs.
Trump’s sweeping trade actions form part of his broader
mission to reorient the United States away from an import-dependent model
toward what he describes as a “manufacturing renaissance.” His administration
has already imposed a baseline 10 percent tariff on all countries, layering on
higher rates against nations where exports to the United States significantly
outweigh imports.
The president has also wielded emergency powers to levy
additional tariffs on longstanding trade partners, including Canada and Mexico,
and on China, citing issues ranging from fentanyl trafficking to illegal
immigration.
It remains unclear how the new tariffs set to take effect
next week will be integrated into the existing patchwork of trade restrictions.
What is clear, however, is that Trump has once again signaled his determination
to double down on protectionism, despite warnings from allies, businesses,
and investors about the risks to global supply chains and American consumers.
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