Companies operating in Ireland need to “hold the nerve” in the face of threatened US tariffs, the Irish premier has told a major conference in Texas. Taoiseach Micheal Martin has said he will tell President Donald Trump that there is a “two-way street” of investment between the US and Ireland when they meet later this week. Amid heightened concern that the president’s protectionist approach to tariffs and tax could pose a significant risk to an Irish economy that is in large part sustained by long-standing investment by US multinationals, Mr Martin will also seek to promote the virtues of the US-Ireland relationship which he said “is a bit more complex than gets presented by figures”.
Mr Martin will hold talks with Mr Trump in the Oval Office on Wednesday, but he began his traditional St Patrick’s programme of engagements in the US with a visit to Austin, Texas – a state the Taoiseach said had witnessed a “new wave of Irish investment” with 120 Irish companies creating about 4,000 jobs. The Fianna Fail leader said he wanted to use the trip to highlight the “enduring nature” of the US-Irish economic relationship. Mr Martin initially declined to be drawn on questions about how he intended to handle the meeting with Mr Trump in Washington DC, insisting he was taking his visit “day by day” and that his focus on Monday was on engagements in Austin, including a meeting with Republican state governor Greg Abbott.
“I represent the country, the people of Ireland, and I am very, very conscious that in a very challenging world, thousands and thousands of jobs depend on the economic relationship between the United States and Ireland,” he added. “And my overriding objective is to copper fasten that for the time ahead and to protect those people who are working in jobs. And that is very important.
” Pressed on his strategy for the meeting with Mr Trump, Mr Martin said: “Our strategy really is to – notwithstanding all the commentary – bring home the idea that (the US has) an enduring, robust presence in Ireland and the relationship is a very strong one that we want to see grow into the future.” However, he later revealed his main emphasis for the meeting when he appeared for a fireside chat at the South by Southwest (SXSW) festival: “How it’s a two-way street will be the main point I’d be making. “It’s not just American investment in Ireland, it’s Irish investment in America as well.
“We are buying a lot of stuff, a lot of American products. We have a lot of Irish companies based here that will grow, and that will continue to grow.” Mr Martin also urged companies with investments in Ireland not to “react too quickly” to the threat of Mr Trump imposing 25% tariffs on the EU, adding that they should see “how the land settles”.
He said: “Hold the nerve, this is a period we’ve got to navigate.” The Taoiseach also argued that Ireland is a “powerful base” for US companies to access the European single market. Elsewhere, he said that Ryanair and AerCap’s purchase of Boeing aircraft is not captured in the US Department of Commerce figures and that Ireland’s “high standards” in life sciences are beneficial to US pharmaceutical companies.
Earlier on his Monday itinerary, Mr Martin visited US multinational tech companies Dell and Tricentis, with the latter announcing plans to hire 50 additional staff in its Cork base over the coming years. “Meetings of this kind very often can sow a seed for future investments,” he said. “To bring home to the companies the strength of what Ireland has to offer in terms of a stable political environment, a very clear investment framework, and also then in terms of human capital.
” Mr Martin said Ireland had a strong position as a member of the European Union to attract the right employees to meet the objectives of companies investing in the country. For the Irish creative sector, the Taoiseach told a different SXSW panel that Ireland can offer filmmakers competitive tax incentives, funding supports and excellent production facilities. That event was staged at the Marlow bar in downtown Austin, which the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs has rebranded as Ireland House for the festival.
There, Mr Martin also met companies that were supported by the Enterprise Ireland development agency and spoke at a “pop-up Gaeltacht” aimed at promoting the Irish language. Monday’s packed itinerary concluded back at the same venue where the Irish consulate in Austin hosted a St Patrick’s reception. The Taoiseach earlier insisted that the US remained an “indispensable partner at a time of great peril in the world”.
Mr Martin and Mr Trump are expected to discuss a range of issues on Wednesday, including the war in Ukraine and the situations in the Middle East and Northern Ireland. The Irish leader will later present Mr Trump with the traditional shamrock bowl in the White House, extending St Patrick’s Day greetings from the people of Ireland to the people of the US A host of Irish Government ministers will also travel to the US, including deputy premier Tanaiste Simon Harris, who will visit Philadelphia and New York, at a time described as a key juncture in European-US relations. Northern Ireland First Minister Michelle O’Neill and deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly will lead an NI Chamber business delegation to North Carolina on Monday.
Ms Little-Pengelly will later travel alone to Washington DC for engagements. Ms O’Neill and Sinn Fein party colleagues are not travelling to Washington as part of “a principled stance against the threat of mass expulsion of the Palestinian people from Gaza”..
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Irish premier tells companies ‘hold the nerve’ in face of US tariff threat
Companies operating in Ireland need to ‘hold the nerve’ in the face of threatened US tariffs, the Irish premier has told a major conference in Texas