Skip to content

Trump replaces border-closure threat with one about Mexican-made cars

‘And I will do it ... I don’t play games,’ POTUS says as he issues yet another ‘warning’

President Donald Trump takes questions from reporters he arrives with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., for a Senate Republican lunch in the Capitol on March 26. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call)
President Donald Trump takes questions from reporters he arrives with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., for a Senate Republican lunch in the Capitol on March 26. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call)

Updated 2:27 p.m. | President Donald Trump has found an alternative to his threat to shutter ports of entry at the southern border: He his now threatening to first slap tariffs on Mexican-made automobiles as a punishment for migrants and drugs coming into the U.S.

He demanded on Thursday that the Mexican government provide additional assistance in curbing the amount of undocumented migrants and illegal drugs moving into the United States from its soil. Trump and his team are eager to shrink the number of attempted border crossings and apprehensions, which have increased under his watch despite his hardline immigration policies.

[As lawmakers fret, Trump takes closure threat to border with 2020 in mind]

“If Mexico doesn’t give the help, that’s okay. We’re going to tariff the cars coming into the United States,” he said. “The only thing less drastic than closing the border is to tariff the cars. And I will do it. … I don’t play games.

“The whole ballgame is cars,” he said. The Mexican government could stop the flow of undocumented migrants and drugs “easily,” he contended, saying he plans to give the Mexican government “a one-year warning.”

Trump made the demand despite the fact that U.S. automakers have production facilities in Mexico that they use to build models that are shipped to and sold in the United States. The threatened import fees would ding those companies’ bottom lines, possibly triggering cost-cutting moves that could cost Americans jobs at U.S.-based facilities.

[Trump slams Fed after Kudlow denies White House trying to influence board]

The president suggested at one point during off-the-cuff remarks during an unrelated event at the White House that the tariffs might also apply to other “Mexican products.” But he singled out autos because “with many countries, it’s cars” – meaning import fees on automobiles cause great economic damage.

White House officials declined to respond to an inquiry about any presidential concerns that U.S. auto manufacturers, workers and customers would inevitably be affected if he put the import fees in place. But the president earlier this week told reporters some thing are more important to him than economic matters.

“Hey, all you hear me talking about is trade.  But let me just give you a little secret: Security is more important to me than trade,” he said.

Trump’s latest threat came a day after auto executives were on Capitol Hill trying to gin up support against automobile tariffs in general. Tom Doll, president and CEO of Subaru of America, told Bloomberg Television that the executives were getting “a lot of sympathy from the Congress folks.”

“Nobody really wants these tariffs. They’re not good for the consumer. Ultimately, the price of the car has to go up,” Doll said. “Depending on who you listen to, the effect could be … $5,000 to $7,000 on the high end.”

The move is vintage Trump, who often makes threats in the pursuit of leverage over another country or Democratic lawmakers. He is eager to make immigration a 2020 reelection issue, and his one-year warning would put the tariffs in place as the next campaign cycle would be about to kick into a full gear.

At least publicly, even White House chief economic adviser Lawrence Kudlow — long a tariffs skeptic — credits the president’s import taxes with helping him pressure China to the negotiating table about a trade pact.

Now, Trump is making the same bet with Mexico.

A couple hours after his Mexico threat, Trump’s personal Twitter account fired off a video mocking former Vice President Joe Biden after a number of women have accused him of touching them inappropriately.

House Democratic leaders had been discussing whether to bring a resolution to the floor to object to Trump’s threat to shutdown the border. Texas Reps. Henry Cuellar and Veronica Escobar introduced one on Thursday, which Speaker Nancy Pelosi praised during her weekly news conference later that morning.

But asked afterward if she planned to bring the resolution to the floor for a vote, Pelosi told Roll Call, “Right now we’re hoping that the president will back down. This is so foolish. We now have word that perhaps he’ll back down.”

Just minutes before news broke that Trump is backing off his threat to shutdown the southern U.S. border, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-California, told reporters he didn’t think Trump would move forward with the idea.

“The president has not closed the border. … I don’t see the president doing it. I haven’t see him do it. I don’t believe he [will],” said McCarthy, who will be among those traveling to the border in southern California with the president on Friday.

Reporters were still talking to McCarthy as the news broke about Trump backing off the threat but when Roll Call asked if he had talked to the president about moving in that direction, McCarthy smiled, turned and walked away.

The White House says Trump, McCarthy and others will be viewing new sections of Trump’s proposed border wall — but they actually will see replacement sections of an existing barrier.

Lindsey McPherson contributed to this report.

 

Recent Stories

Supreme Court denies Navarro bid to delay start of prison sentence

EPA finalizes ban on all remaining uses and importation of asbestos

Spending deal done, though final action could slip past deadline

Capitol Lens | On a roll

In the Spotlight: Maxwell Alejandro Frost

Supreme Court sounds reluctant to curb US social media outreach