❓WHAT HAPPENED: European Union (EU) politicians have decided to pause a new trade deal favorable to the U.S. now that the U.S. Supreme Court has overturned part of President Donald J. Trump’s tariff agenda.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: European Parliament negotiators, President Trump, Supreme Court justices, and various EU politicians.
📍WHEN & WHERE: February 2026, in the European Parliament.
💬KEY QUOTE: “The United States must get its trade policy in order, this level of chaos is not serious.” – Karin Karlsbro, Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for the Swedish Liberals
🎯IMPACT: The approval of the trade deal is delayed as EU seeks clarity on the Supreme Court tariff ruling’s implications.
On Monday, European Union (EU) politicians decided to pause progress on a major trade agreement favorable to the United States after a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision that invalidated many of the tariffs previously imposed by President Donald J. Trump. The European Parliament’s trade committee had previously been preparing to approve the elimination of tariffs on American industrial products under the “Turnberry agreement,” named after President Trump’s Scottish golf course.
Parliament negotiators are set to convene Monday afternoon to officially confirm the pause on the agreement, which was reached last year. The chairman of the trade committee, Bernd Lange, requested an urgent meeting and suggested halting legislative efforts on the deal—a proposal that gained support from the European People’s Party (EPP), the largest grouping in the assembly, and others.
Member of the European Parliament (MEP) Zeljana Zovko wants the European Commission, which acts as the EU’s unelected executive, to consider “better option for us to continue with” now following the Supreme Court ruling.
The situation has been complicated further by President Trump’s recent decision to temporarily raise the global import duty to the United States to 15 percent using tariff powers separate to those the Supeme Court ruled against, signaling he has no intention of ceasing to use the import levies to level the playing field for American producers and workers in international trade.
Karin Karlsbro, an EU lawmaker from the liberal Renew group, stated: “We will not be able to vote on the Turnberry agreement until we have full clarity on how the Supreme Court’s ruling affects the tariff arrangement,” adding, “The United States must get its trade policy in order, this level of chaos is not serious.”
Image © European Union 2017 – European Parliament.
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