EU lawmakers approve trade deal with US but add safeguards
[March 27, 2026] By
SAM McNEIL
BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Parliament voted Thursday to approve a
trade deal between the European Union and the United States but with
amendments added to protect European interests should the U.S. fail to
hold up its end of the bargain.
The deal was negotiated last July in Turnberry, Scotland, by U.S.
President Donald Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der
Leyen. It set a 15% tariff on most goods in an effort to stave off far
higher import duties on both sides that might have sent shock waves
through economies around the globe.
New language now says that the deal can be suspended if it is determined
that Washington “undermined the objectives of the deal, discriminated
against EU economic operators, threatened member states’ territorial
integrity, foreign and defence policies, or engaged in economic
coercion.”
That clause was forged because of tensions over Greenland, said Bernd
Lange, a German lawmaker and head of the EU's parliamentary trade
committee.
Trump drew widespread condemnation across the 27-nation bloc by
threatening to take control of Greenland, a semiautonomous territory of
Denmark. He has backed away from the threat, at least for now.
“If this would happen again, then immediately the tariffs would be
installed,” Lange said at a news conference after lawmakers voted. He
said the the protective modifications were “weatherproofing” the
Turnberry deal.

The deal will now be further negotiated by EU trade representatives
Maroš Šefčovič and his U.S. counterpart Jamieson Greer, who are meeting
Friday on the sidelines of the World Trade Organization meeting in
Yaoundé, Cameroon.
“We need the EU-US deal in force on both sides — delivering real
certainty for EU businesses and showing that genuine partnership gets
results,” Šefčovič said after the vote in Brussels.
There were formally two votes to introduce clauses to the deal. One
passed 417-154 and the other 437-144 with dozens of abstentions each.
The U.S. Ambassador to the EU Andrew Puzder said the vote would provide
“stability and predictability” for U.S. and EU businesses and drive
economic growth. “We encourage all parties to think to the future and
the importance of unleashing opportunities for businesses on both sides
of the Atlantic," he said.
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President Donald Trump and European Commission President Ursula von
der Leyen talk after reaching a trade deal at the Trump Turnberry
golf course in Turnberry, Scotland Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP
Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)
 Malte Lohan, CEO of the American
Chamber of Commerce to the European Union, said the vote is “the
right signal for businesses that have been stuck in limbo over the
past year” and “a necessary step towards a more predictable
transatlantic marketplace.” The EU had paused the deal in the wake
of the February ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court that struck down
Trump's use of an emergency powers law to set new import taxes. The
European Commission, the EU executive charged with trade
negotiations, had sought clarity on the ramifications of the court
ruling.
The value of EU-U.S. trade in goods and services amounted to 1.7
trillion euros ($2 trillion) in 2024, or an average of 4.6 billion
euros a day, according to EU statistics agency Eurostat.
Europe’s biggest exports to the U.S. are pharmaceuticals, cars,
aircraft, chemicals, medical instruments, and wine and spirits.
Among the biggest U.S. exports to the bloc are professional and
scientific services like payment systems and cloud infrastructure,
oil and gas, pharmaceuticals, medical equipment, aerospace products
and cars. Croatian lawmaker Željana Zovko noted that despite the
trade spat between Brussels and Washington, trade across the
Atlantic had grown over the past year. “This resilience proves the
trans-Atlantic trade works, and if it works, we should strengthen
it, not hold it back.”
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