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Trump criticises Ireland on trade during St Patrick’s Day visit

US president levelled accusations against Ireland and the European Union, despite diplomatic pleasantries

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US President Donald Trump welcoming Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin at the White House. Photo: AP

It was perhaps not the welcome Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin had hoped for on an annual US trip to mark St Patrick’s Day – a dressing down from Donald Trump on trade and tariffs.

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“We do have a massive deficit with Ireland,” the US president said in answer to the very first question he faced with Martin in the Oval Office, before going on to lambast the European Union in general.

Trump promised to respond to tariffs imposed by the EU in retaliation for new US levies on steel and aluminium – an economic shock wave that could hit Ireland too.

Certainly the encounter with the Irish taoiseach, or premier, was calmer than the scene less than two weeks ago when Trump and Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky got into a blazing row, also in the Oval Office.

There was even a lighthearted moment as Trump ribbed Vice-President J.D. Vance about the green-and-white shamrock socks he wore to honour Martin’s trip, a tradition by the Irish leader ahead of Saint Patrick’s Day on March 17.

US President Donald Trump points at US Vice-President J.D. Vance’s socks. Photo: Reuters
US President Donald Trump points at US Vice-President J.D. Vance’s socks. Photo: Reuters

But despite the pleasantries during the visit, the 78-year-old president had a long list of grievances about the Emerald Isle.

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