Washington Examiner

Gimenez predicts Mexico will ‘blink first’ in tariff deal

Rep. Carlos Gimenez (R-FL) discussed the implications of ‍a proposed 25% tariff on Mexico, highlighting that Mexico would suffer more from the⁤ tariffs than the United States. He ‌emphasized that 80% of MexicoS exports⁤ come to the U.S., and therefore, imposing⁣ heavy tariffs would considerably impact the mexican economy. The tariff was ⁤initially set to⁤ begin amid a border ‍crisis concerning illegal immigration and⁣ drug‌ trafficking, especially fentanyl. In response to the tariff threats,Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum ‌hinted at retaliatory tariffs but also offered to send 10,000⁣ troops to the border to help control ⁤illegal crossings. The tariff has‌ been‍ postponed⁤ for a month. ⁢Gimenez⁢ suggested that the objective of​ former ⁤President ⁣Trump’s approach is‌ to⁢ secure a fair trade deal rather than exploit anyone. Simultaneously occurring, Canada⁣ has responded⁤ to similar ‌tariff threats by‌ implementing it’s own tariffs on U.S. goods. ⁢China has filed a⁢ lawsuit against the ⁣U.S. regarding the tariffs at the World ​Trade ‌Association.


Carlos Gimenez outlines what Mexico stood to lose in tariff deal

Rep. Carlos Gimenez (R-FL) explained that the since-postponed tariff against Mexico would have “hurt them a lot more” than the United States.

Mexico is facing a 25% tariff that was initially slated to begin on Tuesday. This comes after a yearslong border crisis in which immigrants illegally crossed the border, and there was an increase in fentanyl discovered among states sharing borders with Mexico.

“We are by far the largest economy in the world. Eighty percent of all exports that the Mexicans produce go into the United States,” Gimenez said on Fox Business’s Mornings with Maria Bartiromo on Monday. “If you slap heavy tariffs on that where we’re no longer buying Mexican goods, it’s going to hurt them a lot more than it’s gonna hurt us. I think President Trump just wants to have a fair deal. I don’t think he wants to take advantage of anybody.”

In response, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum threatened retaliatory tariffs but didn’t outline the cost. Instead, in a phone call with Trump on Monday, she promised to provide 10,000 Mexican troops on the border who are “specifically designated to stop the flow of fentanyl and illegal immigrants,” according to Trump. The tariff is on a temporary pause for a month.

“I made a promise on my campaign to stop the flood of illegal aliens and drugs from pouring across our borders, and Americans overwhelmingly voted in favor of it,” Trump said as he signed the executive order that authorized the tariff.

Meanwhile, Canada, which is facing the same 25% tariff, mirrored the tactic and unleashed 25% tariffs on $155 billion of U.S. goods. China filed a lawsuit against the U.S. with the World Trade Organization over its 10% tariff.

Other tariffs against China were already in place from Trump’s first term, and former President Joe Biden largely kept them. The last tariff raised against China was in May 2024, when Biden announced tariffs against $18 billion worth of Chinese goods and effectively raised sale taxes in the U.S. by $3.6 billion.


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