Trump Sets 25% Steel, Aluminum Tariffs, Widening Trade Warbloo

President Donald Trump ordered a 25% tariff on steel and aluminum imports, escalating his efforts to protect politically important US industries with levies hitting some of the country’s closest allies.

The tariffs will apply widely to all US imports of steel and aluminum, including from Canada and Mexico, among the country’s top foreign suppliers of the metals. The levies, which also include finished metal products, are meant to crack down on what administration officials said were efforts by countries like Russia and China to circumvent existing duties.

Trump cast the effort as one that would help bolster domestic production and bring more jobs to the US, and warned that the rate on metal tariffs “may go higher.” The new rates will take effect on March 12, at 12:01 am Washington time, according to a pair of proclamations issued by the White House late Monday.

“It’s going to mean a lot of businesses are going to be opening in the United States,” Trump said Monday as he signed the measures in the Oval Office.

The announcement of Trump’s metals tariffs comes about a week after he added a 10% duty on all Chinese imports. Economists warn that higher border taxes paid by American importers risk raising costs for everything from groceries to gasoline — potentially stoking the very inflationary pressures the president campaigned on quelling.

US administration officials counter, however, that the levies are part of a broader economic strategy — including extended tax cuts and expanded domestic energy production — that will help lower costs overall.