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Finance ministers lament in Warsaw
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As the consternation and confusion over Trump’s tariffs continues, Europe is struggling to put up a unified front. Economics reporter Alessandra Migliaccio, who attended the monthly meeting of EU finance ministers this weekend, explains. Plus, a test drive in the all-electric Cadillac Escalade. If this email was forwarded to you, click here to sign up.

At the monthly conclave of European Union finance ministers in Warsaw over the weekend, the whole unity thing started to wear a bit thin. As ministers and policymakers mingled, strategized and occasionally paused for plates of roast duck, pickles and smoked ham, their public proclamations all stressed the importance of speaking with a single voice when dealing with Donald Trump’s Washington. “To get a balanced agreement, the unity of Europeans as shown by today’s meetings is absolutely essential,” French Finance Minister Eric Lombard told reporters on Friday.

The message? No matter how much the mercurial US president might try to cut a separate deal with you, don’t go there. The European Commission will take care of it, thank you. It’s the commission’s job—and it’s the law, as the bloc’s executive arm is responsible for external trade relations. “We need a truly European answer,” said Polish Finance Minister Andrzej Domanski, the event’s host, since Poland holds the bloc’s rotating presidency.

But in the conference rooms and corridors, the mood was more fractious, with contrasting proposals from officials who were feeling worried and whiplashed by Trump’s negotiating tactics, according to people who asked not to be named discussing private conversations. European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde eventually chided the ministers for speaking out too much and told them to let Brussels take the lead, the people say.

Unity was the theme in public proclamations, but in the conference rooms and corridors the mood was more fractious. Photographer: SOPA Images/Getty Images

The differences occasionally even crept into public view at the event’s austere brick venue, the Polish Army Museum, whose medieval armor and World War II tanks served as a stark reminder of the war in nearby Ukraine—and Poland’s proximity to the front lines. Although European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has mooted the notion of increased levies on US tech giants if talks with the White House fail, German Finance Minister Jörg Kukies argued against that because Europe lacks robust home-grown offerings. “We have to be cautious with digital taxes,” he said in Warsaw. “In many areas of digital services, if you look at data centers and the cloud, there simply aren’t sufficient alternatives.”

The EU, the US’s largest trading partner, has been rocked by Trump’s on-again, off-again stance on tariffs and trade. Last Wednesday, the bloc was staring down a 20% levy on all of its goods. Then that afternoon, Trump changed his mind and said Europe (and dozens of other trading partners) would at least temporarily see a more modest—but still disruptive—10% rate on most goods, with higher levies on cars, steel and aluminum. Since Trump came to office, his team members have made their disdain for America’s European allies abundantly clear. The president has said the EU was formed to “screw” the US, and Vice President JD Vance dissed Europeans in the Signal chat that was inadvertently shared with a journalist.

EU policymakers have reason to be concerned about maintaining a united front. Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni—who’s been cozying up to the US president and Elon Musk lately—is set for a solo visit to Washington this week, where she’s expected to negotiate tariff relief directly with Trump. While the commission insists the trip has been coordinated with Brussels, French Industry Minister Marc Ferracci warned about the dangers of undermining unity. “Europe is strong if it’s united,” Ferracci told FranceInfo radio last week. “If we start having bilateral talks, the dynamic that is present at the moment will end up breaking.”

Paschal Donohoe, Ireland’s finance minister and president of the Eurogroup, a smaller circle of finance chiefs from countries that use the euro, says it’s important for the EU to respond to the US in a proportionate way but that it must also prepare a Plan B to make Europe less reliant on the US. “For now our focus is on negotiation, on avoiding the worst,” Donohoe told Bloomberg TV. “Can we de-escalate this, find a new outcome, a better place than we are today? But as we are doing that, we have to assess the trading relationships we have elsewhere.”

In Brief

Cadillac Hunts Green Buyers for Its Bestselling SUV

The interior of a Cadillac Escalade IQ. Photographer: Emily Elconin/Bloomberg

The Cadillac Escalade has been the bestselling large luxury SUV in North America for over a decade. And with more than 1 million sold globally, it’s earned its status as the coolest such vehicle made in the US. A rare oversize legend, it consistently provides fans with a combination of space, opulence and the kind of swagger one can only get alighting from a 6-foot-3-inch rig.

This spring marks the arrival of the all-electric Escalade IQ. The $127,700 behemoth costs $40,000 more than its gas-powered counterpart and is the US carmaker’s first attempt to use batteries alone to power its crown jewel. It has a handsome and imposing exterior and an interior befitting a private plane, plus a driving range that beats the Kia EV9, Rivian R1S and Volvo EX90. (Tesla doesn’t make an SUV this big.) Cadillac once represented the pinnacle of American luxury; with the Escalade IQ, the brand can fairly claim to be at the top of the electric SUV competition.

Will the SUV’s 465-mile charge alleviate suburban drivers’ range anxiety? Hannah Elliott took the 19-foot-long brontosaurus out for a spin. Read her review at: The Escalade, Cadillac’s Crown Jewel, Finally Goes Electric

Lure of the Gulf

$8 billion
That’s the size of Brookfield’s private equity portfolio in the Middle East. With infrastructure and real estate assets worth $5 billion, Brookfield is one of the biggest foreign investors in a region that’s growing more appealing as the market turmoil from Trump’s tariffs dashes hopes for a resurgence of deals in the US.

Cuban Exiles

“What our community has known and understood for decades is evaporating. People are alarmed and shocked to see that the country they fled to is behaving in ways that are similar to the places they fled from.”
Ana Sofía Peláez
Head of the Miami Freedom Project, a civil-society group
Migrants who fled Cuba have long been a powerful force in Republican politics, but now as many as 500,000 recent arrivals from the island risk deportation. Read the full story here.

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