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How Trump is relaunching a tariff war citing ‘forced labour’ concerns

10 articles
5 sources
0% diversity
Updated Yesterday
Key Topics & People
forced labour *Jamieson Greer Brazil Trump administration Office of the United States Trade Representative

Coverage Framing

7
1
1
1
Economic Impact(7)
Political Strategy(1)
Diplomatic(1)
Human Rights(1)
Avg Factuality:70%
Avg Sensationalism:Moderate

Story Timeline

Jun 15, 2026

1 articles|1 sources
tariff warforced labourglobal tradetrade act of 1974us trade representative
Economic Impact(1)
Al JazeeraYesterday

How Trump is relaunching a tariff war citing ‘forced labour’ concerns

The Trump administration has relaunched its tariff agenda, this time utilizing Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 to impose tariffs on imports from approximately 60 economies, including allies like the EU, Britain, and Canada. Announced on June 2, 2026, the tariffs, proposed at up to 12.5 percent, are justified by the US Trade Representative (USTR) as a response to these nations' alleged failure to prevent trade in goods produced with forced labor, which the USTR deems "unreasonable or discriminatory" and burdensome to US commerce. This move follows the Supreme Court's February 2026 decision striking down Trump's previous use of emergency powers for trade wars. Analysts predict this new approach could accelerate a global trade reorientation away from the US, encouraging countries to pursue bilateral trade deals.

MeasuredFactual3 sources
Negative

Key Claims

factual

The US Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trump’s previous use of an emergency powers law to wage a trade war in February.

— article

factual

The US Trade Representative announced it is pursuing Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 to impose tariffs on up to 12.5 percent on imports from '60 economies'.

— article

factual

Trump administration has relaunched its tariff agenda using a new approach citing 'forced labour' concerns.

— article

statistic

The EU-Mercosur deal creates a trading zone of 700 million people and the EU-India trade agreement creates a free trade zone of two billion people.

— article

prediction

Analysts predict Trump’s latest push could accelerate the 'reorientation' of global trade away from the US.

— analysts

Jun 5, 2026

1 articles|1 sources
tariff threatindia trade talksforced laboursupply-chain concernspressure tactic
Political Strategy(1)
South China Morning PostJun 5

Is US wielding new tariff threat to secure big bargain in India trade talks?

Analysts suggest the US is using the threat of additional tariffs on Indian imports, citing forced labor supply-chain concerns, as a negotiation tactic to secure a better deal in ongoing trade talks with New Delhi. This proposal stems from a Section 301 unfair trade practices investigation by the Trump administration. The administration recommended a 12.5% levy on products from India, China, Japan, South Korea, Brazil, and Switzerland, among others. This development occurred despite a visit by US Trade Representative officials to Delhi earlier this week to accelerate discussions on finalizing an agreement, following an interim framework reached in February.

MeasuredMixed1 source
Neutral

Key Claims

factual

Trump administration proposed a 12.5% levy on products from India, China, Japan, South Korea, Brazil, and Switzerland.

— Trump administration

factual

USTR officials visited Delhi to speed up trade agreement talks.

— article

factual

An interim trade framework was reached in February.

— article

quote

US threat of tariffs on India is a pressure tactic for trade talks.

— analysts

Jun 3, 2026

6 articles|5 sources
forced labourtariffstrading partnerssupply chainsdonald trump
Economic Impact(4)
The Guardian - World NewsJun 3

Trump threatens tariffs on 60 trading partners including UK and Canada over ‘forced labour’

President Trump has threatened to impose tariffs of 10-12.5% on goods from 60 trading partners, including the UK, EU, and Canada, over alleged failures to address forced labor in imports. This move is seen as an attempt to revive his trade policy after previous tariffs were deemed unlawful by US courts. The EU has responded by stating it expects the US to respect a prior tariff agreement and considers these new tariffs unjustified. The US argues that these measures are necessary to create a level playing field for American workers. The proposed tariffs, which would affect major partners like China and Japan, are based on investigations into labor laws and could be implemented after a public comment period.

Mixed toneFactual3 sources
Negative
Al JazeeraJun 3

US cites forced labour concerns as grounds for new tariffs

The US Trade Representative (USTR) has proposed new tariffs of up to 12.5 percent on imports from 60 economies. This action stems from a Section 301 unfair trade practices investigation, intended to reinstate tariffs previously struck down by the Supreme Court. The USTR cited these economies' alleged failure to curb trade in goods made with forced labor as the grounds for the proposed duties. The USTR stated that American workers are forced to compete on an unlevel playing field due to this issue. Trading partners, including European lawmakers, have rejected these findings, with some calling them "utterly absurd." The proposed tariffs include 10 percent additional duties on imports from Canada, the EU, Mexico, and others, while the remaining 45 countries will face 12.5 percent additional duties.

MeasuredFactual3 sources
Negative
Associated Press (AP)Jun 3

US says it plans extra tariffs of 10% or more for most trading partners after forced labor probe

The Trump administration is proposing additional tariffs of 10% or more on goods from dozens of major trading partners. This action follows a probe into imports allegedly made with forced labor, with the U.S. Trade Representative stating that partners have failed to enforce import bans on such goods. Canada, Mexico, Taiwan, and the United Kingdom are among those facing a 10% tariff, while China, Japan, India, South Korea, Brazil, and Switzerland, along with others, will face a 12.5% tariff. USTR Ambassador Jamieson Greer stated that this is to ensure American workers are not at a disadvantage and that trade does not encourage forced labor. These proposed tariffs are subject to public comment and review and are not immediately effective.

MeasuredFactual
Negative
Diplomatic(1)
South China Morning PostJun 3

China, EU slam proposed US tariffs, reject forced labour allegations

The Trump administration has proposed new tariffs of up to 12.5% on imports from China and 59 other countries. The Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) stated on Tuesday that these nations failed to adequately restrict US imports made with forced labor, leading to potential punitive action under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974. Analysts suggest this move aims to re-establish the US tariff regime following recent legal challenges. Trading partners have criticized this proposal.

MeasuredFactual2 sources
Negative
Human Rights(1)
BBC News - WorldJun 3

US announces new tariffs over forced labour concerns

The US has announced new tariffs on imports from 54 trading partners due to concerns over forced labor. These tariffs, which have not yet been enforced, follow an investigation launched in March by Greer into whether countries had failed to prohibit the importation of goods produced with forced labor. The investigation concluded that 54 countries had not imposed or effectively enforced such a prohibition. The US trade department will impose 10% tariffs on imports from Canada, the EU, Britain, Indonesia, Mexico, Pakistan, Argentina, Bangladesh, Cambodia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Malaysia, and Taiwan. The remaining 45 countries, including China and India, will face 12.5% duties. The UK government stated it is addressing forced labor in its supply chains.

MeasuredFactual1 source
Neutral

Key Claims

factual

US proposed new tariffs of up to 12.5% on imports from China and 59 other economies.

— US Administration

factual

USTR stated China and 59 other economies failed to prohibit or adequately restrict US imports made with forced labour.

— Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR)

factual

China and EU have slammed the proposed US tariffs.

— China, EU

factual

China and EU reject the forced labour allegations.

— China, EU

factual

US proposes new tariffs of up to 12.5% on imports from 60 economies due to concerns over forced labor.

— USTR

Jun 2, 2026

2 articles|2 sources
trade practicesdigital tradetariffspunitive tariffdeforestation
Economic Impact(2)
Al JazeeraJun 2

US targets Brazil with new tariffs over trade practices

The United States plans to impose new 25 percent tariffs on Brazilian imports, citing unfair trade practices, including illegal deforestation and digital trade issues. The tariffs, announced by US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, stem from a nearly year-long investigation under Section 301 of US trade policy. The US government contends that Brazil's trade practices are unreasonable and restrict US commerce, pointing to agreements Brazil has with Mexico and India. A public comment period is open until July 1, with a hearing scheduled for July 6. While beef, coffee, and rare earths are among potential exemptions, the move follows a deterioration in US-Brazil relations.

MeasuredFactual2 sources
Negative
South China Morning PostJun 2

US proposes 25% tariff to punish Brazil over trade practices

The Trump administration has proposed a 25% tariff on many Brazilian imports, citing unfair trade practices. Top trade official Jamieson Greer announced the proposed measures on Monday, which fall under the Section 301 trade statute. These tariffs address issues including digital trade, illegal deforestation, electronic payment services, preferential tariffs, intellectual property protection, and ethanol market access. The proposed tariffs are open for public consultation until July 15 and will exclude certain items like beef, coffee, rare earths, metals, energy, and aircraft parts.

MeasuredFactual1 source
Negative

Key Claims

factual

The US plans new 25 percent tariffs on Brazilian imports, citing issues like deforestation and digital trade practices.

— US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer

factual

The new tariffs would be imposed under Section 301 of US trade policy, allowing sanctions for "unfair" trade practices.

— US government

quote

The US government stated that Brazil's trade practices "are unreasonable and burden or restrict US commerce".

— US Department of Commerce

statistic

Data shows the US maintains a trade surplus with Brazil, with Brazil buying more goods from the US than it exported in March.

— article

factual

The new tariff would partially replace a 50 percent tariff on many Brazilian goods imposed last year.

— article