
South China Morning Post · Feb 25, 2026 · Collected from RSS
Washington will keep China tariffs at their current level as the Trump administration seeks “continuity” after the Supreme Court struck down the levies it imposed last year, according to US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, weeks ahead of a high-stakes meeting between the two countries’ leaders. The US will keep in place current China tariffs, which have varied from 35 per cent to 50 per cent depending on the product, since the countries “de-escalated” the trade war last year, Greer said on...
Washington will keep China tariffs at their current level as the Trump administration seeks “continuity” after the Supreme Court struck down the levies it imposed last year, according to US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, weeks ahead of a high-stakes meeting between the two countries’ leaders.The US will keep in place current China tariffs, which have varied from 35 per cent to 50 per cent depending on the product, since the countries “de-escalated” the trade war last year, Greer said on Wednesday in an interview with Fox Business.“We don’t intend to escalate beyond that,” Greer said. “We intend to really stick to the deal that we had before.”‘We have a deal’: Trump claims breakthrough after ‘12 out of 10’ talks with Xi Jinping‘We have a deal’: Trump claims breakthrough after ‘12 out of 10’ talks with Xi JinpingTrump last week quickly responded to the Supreme Court’s decision by saying that he had “great alternatives” that would allow him to “take in more money”. He pledged to invoke Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 to impose 10 per cent global tariffs, then announced on social media that he was actually increasing them to 15 per cent, the maximum rate allowed under the law.US trading partners have scrambled to understand the Trump administration’s detailed plans to maintain its tariff regime with the new tool while upholding its global trade agreements.