Trump's Steel Tariffs Now Apply to Milk and Hundreds of Other Products That Aren't Steel
It makes little sense, but that's what happens when you give the president unchecked, unilateral tariff powers.

There's nothing quite like dipping a chocolate chip cookie into a tall glass of…steel?
The Trump administration's 50 percent tariffs on imported steel and aluminum were expanded this week to cover hundreds of imports that plainly are not steel or aluminum. Among the items targeted by the new tariffs: dairy products like milk and cream, as well as gasoline and other fuels, fire extinguishers, baby strollers, furniture, engines, and motorcycles. In short, anything that contains steel or aluminum or that is (as with dairy products) transported or stored in steel or aluminum containers could now be subject to those massive import taxes.
"Auto parts, chemicals, plastics, furniture components—basically, if it's shiny, metallic, or remotely related to steel or aluminum, it's probably on the list," Brian Baldwin, vice president of customs for Kuehne+Nagel International, a logistics firm, wrote in a post on LinkedIn.
Officially, the Commerce Department says the 407 new product categories covered by the tariffs are "derivative" of steel and aluminum. Only the steel and aluminum components of the imports will actually be taxed.
In reality, however, this is a wild expansion of how tariffs typically apply.
"Many of these new [Harmonized Tariff Schedule] HTS provisions would not normally be considered aluminum or steel derivative products," notes Michael Roll, a trade attorney for Deringer, an international logistics firm, "at least not by any reasonable understanding of those words."
But why should the Trump administration be constrained by the reasonable understanding of words? After all, this is the same administration that's claiming the authority to impose tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), a 1977 law that does not contain the word "tariff" within its text and that has never been used for this purpose. For that matter, the tariffs on steel and aluminum have been imposed under the guise of a "national security" claim that suggests trade with longtime allies like Canada and the European Union is somehow a threat to the United States.
If you're willing to buy all that, you'll probably be able to talk yourself into believing that milk from Canada or deodorant from France is also a threat to national security and might as well be considered steel or aluminum.
Anyone who retains the ability to think logically about this stuff, however, should be annoyed, at a minimum.
But, wait, it actually gets worse. When it announced the expanded list of products that would be covered by the steel and aluminum tariffs, the Commerce Department also created a new process for deciding whether even more products ought to be covered by those same tariffs. Beginning next month, there will be three annual "windows"—in January, May, and September—when companies can petition the Commerce Department for more tariffs on their competitors' goods.
That's great news for lobbyists and trade lawyers, who are already keeping plenty busy during the Trump administration—registered tariff lobbyists have reported a 599 percent increase in revenue this year, according to one analysis.
That's exactly what you'd expect to see in the current political dynamic. If tariffs can be raised or lowered according to the whims of one man (or those of his closest advisers and allies), then businesses that can afford to do so are going to spend handsome sums of money to influence those decisions. That's not just borderline corrupt and obviously gross, it's also taking resources out of the productive part of the economy and redirecting them toward the very swamp of political influence-peddling that Trump once vowed to drain.
And the result of this warped, antidemocratic process is going to be more batshit proclamations like "milk is now steel" from an administration that will use any excuse to raise taxes on American consumers of foreign-made goods. Congress must assert its powers to stop this insanity.
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Stop talking about tariffs! You're going to make the MAGAs cry!
Being constantly ignorant and retarded on the subject is the issue dumdum. You just are ignorant on it as well.
Do you know someone posted Eric's mistake in the roundup thread?
TDS = tariff derangement syndrome? Eric is correct that Congress allowed this to happen and needs to correct its mistake, but not about milk being steel. That's not what the regulation says and claiming that it does is just click-bait hyperbole.
EB;dr
Ignorance is strength, Cumrade! Be Ye therefor PROUD of Yer PervFected ignorance! Now the GOOD folks are having a book-burning at high noon, in front of the pubic library. Are ye cumming… Or are ye with the unpatriotic eggheads and the left-tits?
>It makes little sense, but that's what happens when you give the president unchecked, unilateral tariff powers.
Yep. That is what happens. Probably shouldn't have done that.
But thanks for admitting that he has those powers.
Finally admitting to fact? This is new, it needs encouraging!
Shitler had unlimited powers too. If I recognize that, do I approve of shit?
HOW do You PervFected, Mind-Infected "Team Red" psycho-phantic sycophants sleep at night, after "cheering on" such power-grabbing, EVIL fascist dick-tator-shit? Do You know a DAMNED thing about history?
Do You know a DAMNED thing about history?
Sadly, SQRLSY, they do not.
Lol. AWR projecting again. Hilarious.
Trump's Steel Tariffs Now Apply to Milk and Hundreds of Other Products That Aren't Steel
Clickbait lie headline. The truth is literally in the article.
In short, anything that contains steel or aluminum or that is (as with dairy products) transported or stored in steel or aluminum containers
Only the steel and aluminum components of the imports will actually be taxed.
Eric and sarc will still choose ignorance despite the correction.
Regarding this Trump milk thing, they both suffer from mad dow disease.
Ok, that's there's funny, I don't care who ya are!
herd mentality...
FTZ's (foreign trade zones) are looking better and better.
Imported Soda tariff $0.01 on the can. Transportation costs due to reduced gas prices from Trump's policies the can of soda costs $0.03 less to transport.
Why have the tariffs not caused inflation people ask?
As we often said in the sixties, reality is a crutch.
Non-tobacco products are regulated as tobacco.
Raw milk cannot be labeled "milk" in Florida unless vitamin D has been added, making it NOT raw milk. (this may have been fixed, but it happened).
Men are given benefits reserved for women, just by asking.
Reason writes article headlines directly contradicting the article.
Life goes on.
Aluminum and steel are the most recycled things on the planet. If I had an aluminum milk barrel I could sell it for a fat chunk of change tomorrow. Might be worth more than the milk.
I am enjoying the caricature value of your premises.
Steel yourselves for more of this, it's really going to test your mettle.
Officials need to iron out the details.
Seemed like good idea but it all went sour.
Reason is going to milk this tariff topic for everything they can. It's a cheesy article, for sure.
Mr. Boehm, what you've just written is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever read. At no point in your rambling, incoherent article were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this forum is now dumber for having read it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.
Congress made this mess. And Boehm is right that Congress must fix it. They need to repeal all the laws that delegated away their authority and clean up all the vague, ambiguous language that lets them escape accountabilty.
Unfortunately, the odds of that happening are ... slim.
IEEPA Act of 1977
Introduced in the House as H.R. 7738 by Jonathan Brewster Bingham (D–NY)
Signed into law by President Jimmy Carter [D]
Passed by the 95th US Congress House [D], Senate [D]
If you can't figure out the source of E.O. madness.
You'll never have a decent chance at ending it.
Something, something about, "I've got a pen, and I've got a phone".
It is way past time Congress fixed [D]'s F'Ups.
The only problem is [D]'s still control far too much of Congress to make that happen.