News Analysis
While experts are divided on how the European Union (EU) and its 27 members should handle the prospect of tariffs being imposed by President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming administration, there is agreement that the continent will have to make adjustments politically and economically to avoid being left worse off.
Robert Tyler, a senior policy adviser at Brussels-based thinktank New Direction, believes there are ways for the European nations to stay on the new president’s good side, but they will require flexibility that has largely eluded them in recent years.
Tyler told The Epoch Times that the first major change for the European Union in terms of relations with the United States would be a political rather than economic shift….