US bilateral trade deals stand despite tariff ruling, Greer says

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US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer

US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer | Photo Credit: KYLIE COOPER

President Donald Trump’s tariff-policy defeat in the US Supreme Court won’t unravel individual deals the administration has sealed with its trading partners, US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said.

Those deals, which the administration made with China, the European Union, South Korea and others, remain in place, Greer said Sunday on CBS’s Face the Nation. He sought to separate those arrangements from the planned 15 per cent global tariff Trump announced Saturday.

“We want them to understand these deals are going to be good deals,” Greer said. “We’re going to stand by them. We expect our partners to stand by them.”

The high court ruling that struck down Trump’s use of emergency authority to wield tariffs preceded the president’s planned trip next month to China. Greer suggested that alternative US trade tools, including those involving investigations of other countries’ trade practices, would give the US leverage.

“We have tariffs like this already in place on China, we have open investigations already,” he said.

Trump is expected to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping during his visit starting March 31.

“The president and Xi have a strong relationship,” Greer told Fox News Sunday, noting the US maintains an average tariff of 40 per cent on China without using the emergency law struck down by the court. 

Trump’s approach to trade, largely nullified by the Supreme Court, nevertheless has riled US trading partners worldwide, including the European Union.

The European Parliament’s trade chief said Sunday he’ll propose freezing the EU’s ratification process of the trade deal with the US until they’ve received details from the Trump administration on its trade policy. 

Greer said he “spoke with my counterpart from the EU this weekend” and would be talking with officials of other key US trading partners to reassure them.

“Rest assured, I’ve been speaking to these folks as well,” Greer told CBS. “I’ve been telling them for a year — whether we won or lost we were going to have tariffs, the president’s policy was going to continue. 

“That’s why they signed these deals even while the litigation was pending,” he said.

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Published on February 22, 2026

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