
US President Donald Trump has supported the duties with often false or inaccurate statements. Here we will look at the most sensational ones. Enjoy!
US President Donald J. Trump based his campaign on the need to make America great again – Make America Great Again – and did so to the tune of slogans and catchphrases such as ‘America First!’ and ‘return to the Golden Age’. The trade tariffs, imposed, then lifted, and then reinstated, are the result of this strategy and are justified by blows of impressive statements. The problem is that many of these are unfounded. Off to fact-checking!
Donald Trump, when talking about the United States, tends to inflate the figure.s
Donald Trump is a proud American and, as such, is prone to magnifying everything about the United States of America, including numbers. Let us examine some sovereignist flare-ups:
- The Paris Climate Agreement cost the United States trillions of dollars that other countries were not paying. In Congress on 4 March 2025, Donald Trump justified his exit from the Paris Climate Agreement in this way: untrue, the United States has never earmarked even remotely similar sums for the Agreement. Joe Biden, when he took office, promised to allocate around $11 billion per year, a figure that was later scaled back.
- ‘Honda has just announced a new plant in Indiana, one of the largest in the world‘. Also at the Congress on 4 March 2025, the US President declared in a triumphant tone the construction of a new industrial hub by the Japanese giant: untrue, Honda had expressed its intention to build the latest Honda Civic in Indiana rather than Mexico, as reported by Reuters, without confirming this.
- ‘The US is collecting $2 billion a day from customs duties. ‘. Statement of 8 April 2025, during a speech to coal industry workers: false, the figure is in the hundreds of millions, not billions and, most importantly, the duties are borne by American importers, not foreign exporters.
- “We were losing $2 trillion a year on trade“—sentence uttered by Donald Trump on 22 April 2025 during an interview with Time in the White House. Here, the POTUS refers to the US trade deficit with the rest of the world before his arrival: false, in 2024 the imbalance amounted to some $918 billion, in 2023 to $773 billion, in 2022 to $945 billion, and so on.
- ‘I have signed 200 agreements. ‘. On 25 April 2025, in the same interview with the Times, when asked, ‘Not a single one (trade agreement, ed.) has been announced. When will you announce them?” Donald Trump replied with a dry “I have closed 200 deals”: untrue, there was – and is – no evidence to validate this claim.
Donald Trump and the European Union: not quite love at first sight
That the President of the United States of America has no excessive sympathy for the Old Continent is a well-known fact: just recently, he confirmed this ‘slight’ antipathy by raising tariffs to 50%. Let us see why:
- “They don’t buy our cars, they don’t buy our food. They don’t buy anything.” On Sunday, 6 April 2025, Donald Trump told reporters aboard the presidential plane Air Force One that the EU would take advantage of the US: untrue. In 2024 alone, the EU imported almost $650 billion worth of goods from the US. Not exactly chump change.
- “They don’t take our agricultural products“. Also on that 6 April, POTUS accused us of not buying goods and commodities for agriculture: untrue, as the US government itself reports, in 2024, the European Union spent almost $13 billion (+1% compared to 2023) on agricultural commodities. We like American dried (nuts) fruit.
- “They put up barriers that make it impossible to sell a car. It’s not a question of money. It’s that they make everything so difficult: the standards, the tests. They drop a bowling ball on the roof of your car from 20 feet up. And if there’s a small dent, they tell you: ‘Sorry, your car is not suitable‘. This is beautiful. Monday, 7 April 2025, bilateral with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: untrue, there is no similar safety check in Europe, and most importantly, nowhere does it say that minor damage can cause the car to fail the test.
- ‘The European Union was created to exploit the United States of America‘: false. On 10 April 2025, Donald Trump is the protagonist of a tirade so vague that it is difficult to refute. In any case, numerous scholars – especially historians and economists – have been taken aback by this statement. John O’Brennan, a leading professor of European Integration, European Union Politics, and International Relations, said that this statement ‘could not be more wrong or inaccurate‘. And like many others.
From China with fury
That Americans and Chinese do not get along well is well known. US President Donald Trump, since his inauguration, has stepped up his game with a trade war based on extreme tariffs that was later suspended. Let us examine some of his recent mental gymnastics:
- “We had massive deficits with China. Biden let the situation get out of hand. These are $1.1 trillion deficits; ridiculous, and it is simply an unfair relationship. It is 23 January 2025, and we are at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos when these words come from the speakers: false. The fact checkers indicate that in 202,3 indeed the US trade deficit as a whole will be around that figure. Donald Trump, however, forgets one crucial detail: the $1.1 trillion deficit concerns the whole world, not just China, and only considers goods without including services in the calculation.
- ‘We have a deficit with China of more than a trillion dollars. ‘ This was stated by The Donald in an interview on Fox News Radio on 21 February 2025: false. As reported by the B.E.A. (Bureau of Economic Analysis), in 202,4 the trade deficit was around $263 billion; in 2023 the figure was close to $252 billion. In short, it was wrong by about $730 billion.
- China has never paid even 10 cents to any other American president. Liberation Day, Wednesday 2 April 2025. Donald Trump announces tariffs for the first time and finds time to fire another propaganda bullet. By this, POTUS meant that before him, the Chinese were free to trade with the US for free: untrue. In 1792, Alexander Hamilton, then US Secretary of the Treasury, proposed the Tariff Act – also known as the Hamilton Tariff – to incentivise the consumption of domestically produced goods.
For Donald Trump, the grass is always greener on the other side
We close this review of rhetorical acrobatics with the United States’ neighbours: Canada and Mexico. These three great nations have always had very close trade relations, formalised by various agreements including NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) and the USMCA (United States Mexico Canada Agreement).
- The US has a ‘200 billion deficit with Canada. He emphasised this several times on 7 January 2025 at a press conference at his home in Mar-a-Lago: false. Again, the B.E.A. data tell us that in 2024 the imbalance between imports and exports with Canada amounted to $35.7 billion.
- Canada is “ONE OF THE NATIONS WITH THE HIGHEST DUTIES IN THE WORLD“. All caps because Donald Trump, on Truth, often writes in caps lock. On 11 March 202,5, he published this statement: false, as also reported by the World Bank, which puts Canada in 102nd position out of 137 countries for weighted average tariff on all products. This indicator reflects the average import tax, calculated by taking into account the weight of different products imported.
- “Canada does not allow American banks to do business in Canada, but their banks invade the American market. Oh, that sounds about right, doesn’t it?” he wrote in Truth on 4 March 2025: untrue, Canada does not ban foreign banks, much less American ones. They have recently tightened regulations, but banking institutions like Bank of America, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo have been operating in Canada for more than a hundred years.
- “We have a $200 billion trade deficit with Mexico“. The US President said this on 9 February 2025, during an interview for Fox News: untrue. Again, the B.E.A.’s 2024 figures show a trade deficit of around $180 billion, half of what Trump said.
In short, we have only analysed one tenth of the falsehoods that the 48th President of the United States of America has been able to invent during these first five months in office. Knowing the data is very important and allows you to speak with full knowledge of the facts and avoid embarrassing and momentous blunders.
For this reason, join Young Platform and get informed so that you will have safe arguments with your friends during the Thursday afternoon aperitif!