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Irish Taoiseach Micheal Martin flags ‘outstanding issues’ on US tariffs

ALN

Ireland is working to resolve ‘outstanding issues’ for ‘quite a number of industries’ following the EU-US trade agreement last year, the taoiseach has said.

As part of what has become a traditional annual St Patrick’s Day visit to the White House, Micheal Martin would be expected to meet US President Donald Trump in the Oval Office.

Last year, the two leaders engaged with reporters for 50 minutes on a range of issues  including the tariff dispute.

In July and August 2025, the EU and the US reached an agreement on trade and further negotiation in the context of Trump’s tariff regime on imports into the country.

On Tuesday, Martin said dialogue was ongoing on a range of issues.

Speaking to reporters before a Cabinet meeting, he said: ‘Last year, the EU and the US reached an agreement in respect of tariffs and the trading issue  which did stabilise the situation as evidenced by our own economic and fiscal returns.’

The Trump administration initiated a range of ‘section 232’ investigations which examine the impact of imports on national security.

These relate to several sectors including pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, medical devices, robotics, drones, wind turbines, commercial aircraft, critical minerals, and timber.

The EU has also continued to engage in negotiations for US tariff exemptions on steel and aluminium products, while Irish politicians have argued for a carve out applying to wines and spirits.

Martin said: ‘It still is challenging for quite a number of industries, so our focus is on dialogue, continuing to work with US government to resolve any outstanding issues.’

The taoiseach also cautioned it is ‘early days’ in relation to planning for the March trip.

Asked if the US’s territorial ambitions for Greenland put pressure on diplomatic relations, the Taoiseach said: ‘I would hope that the situation in relation to Greenland would be resolved.

‘There is a clear basis for doing that and I look forward to that happening.’

By Cillian Sherlock, Press Association

Press Association: Finance

source: PA

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