GM, Ford Applaud Trump 25% Medium-, Heavy-Duty Truck Tariff Blast Ram Trucks Waiver Appeal

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October 8, 2025
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7 comments
Heavy Duty Truck Tariff 1

A fight over a new 25% medium, heavy-duty truck waiver has GM and Ford applauding the move while Ram Trucks seeks a waiver to avoid a massive hit to their business.

Trump 25% Medium-, Heavy-Duty Truck Tariff

Heavy-Duty Truck Tariff 2
The Saltillo Plant in Mexico builds Ram HD trucks and it is in the crosshairs for the Trump Administration. (Photo courtesy Stellantis)

The new Trump 25% medium-truck tariff set to effect on November 1, 2025 and is part of an earlier planned tariff on heavy-duty trucks. These trucks are a threat to “national security” and imposing a tariff would help U.S. companies from threats to “unfair outside competition” according to a Reuters.com story citing the Trump Administration.

Both tariffs on medium-duty and heavy-duty trucks will impact everything from HD trucks, delivery trucks, garbage trucks, public utility trucks, transit, shuttle, school buses and tractor-trailer trucks as well as semi-trucks and heavy-duty vocational vehicles.

The top 5 countries importing those trucks into the U.S. are Mexico, Canada, Japan, Germany and Finland. These countries are “allies or close partners of the United States posing no threat to U.S. national security” according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce that has urged the Commerce Department to reconsider the tariff.

In April, the U.S. Commerce Department began investigating heavy truck imports under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act. This law permits import taxes on goods considered vital to national security. The probe targets medium- and heavy-duty trucks over 10,000 pounds and their parts, noting that most U.S. imports come from a few foreign suppliers accused of “predatory trade practices,” according to Newsweek.

Ford Applauds the Move

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Ford applauds the tariff and see it as a boost to their business. (Photo courtesy Ford Motor Company)

Ford CEO Jim Farley applauds the move for the tariffs saying it will help the company since they have focused on growing their U.S. manufacturing base.

“This is a really big deal for our country and for Ford,” Farley said in a previous interview when discussing these new tariffs. “We have a lot of competition from overseas and a 25 percent tariff would be a really big deal.”

Ford has made it a point to showcase its U.S. manufacturing footprint since the tariffs and have announced future plans to build a new $30,000 electric truck in Louisville, Kentucky with a $2 billion investment.

Ford currently builds its medium-duty F-650 and F-750 at the Ohio Assembly Plant in Avon Lake, Ohio. It builds Super Duty trucks at the Kentucky Truck Plant in Louisville, Kentucky, and the Ohio Assembly Plant in Avon Lake, Ohio.

GM Mostly Unaffected by the Tariff

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GM will have some impact from the tariff with their GMC Sierra HD but they are largely unaffected. (Photo courtesy GMC)

GM largely is unaffected by the tariffs as well.

For the medium-duty Chevy Silverado trucks, they are built through a joint venture with Navistar at the Navistar plan in Springfield, Ohio.

GM does build some GMC HD trucks in Silao, Mexico and that plant has been in the crosshairs of ongoing discussions for tariffs.

Ram Trucks wants a waiver

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Ram Trucks meanwhile is going to be hit hard by the tariffs and stands to be a big loser with its impact. (Photo courtesy Ram Trucks)

Unlike GM and Ford, Ram Trucks imports many trucks from Mexico and stands to be hit hard by the tariff creating a price disadvantage for the company.

Media reports say Stellantis, parent company of Ram Trucks has asked for a wavier.

Both Ford and GM have reportedly argued to the Commerce Department that granting a wavier would give an unfair cost break for Stellantis.

According to S&P Global data cited by Bloomberg, Stellantis produced 206,962 Ram 2500 and 3500 trucks in Saltillo, Mexico, last year. Ford built nearly 400,000 trucks at U.S. plants, while GM assembled about 266,000 Silverado and GMC Sierra 2500 and 3500 trucks domestically.

Ram Trucks also builds chassis cab trucks in Mexico as well for the 4500 and 5500. And Ford is adding Super Duty production in Canada in 2026 with some of those trucks that could be impacted.



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testerdahl

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2,716 messages 4,596 likes

A fight over a new 25% medium, heavy-duty truck waiver has GM and Ford applauding the move while Ram Trucks seeks a waiver to avoid a massive hit to their business. Trump 25% Medium-, Heavy-Duty Truck Tariff The new Trump 25% medium-truck tariff set to effect on November 1, 2025 and is part of an earlier planned tariff on heavy-duty trucks. These trucks are a threat to “national security” and imposing a tariff would help U.S. companies from threats to “unfair outside competition” according to a Reuters.com story citing the Trump Administration. Both tariffs on medium-duty and heavy-duty trucks will […] (read full article...)

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D
Dusdaddy

Well-known member

1,354 messages 2,020 likes

lol...."national security". That's a stretch...

Well, the original is called the "Chicken Tax", what will this one be called?

Reply 2 likes

S
Saddle Tramp

Moderator

1,060 messages 1,198 likes

Didn't Trump have his team write up and pass the contract between the United States, Canada, and Mexico that allows these factories to build these vehicles in the first place?

Reply 1 like

E
Einstein

Active member

56 messages 109 likes

lol...."national security". That's a stretch...

Well, the original is called the "Chicken Tax", what will this one be called?

Pumpkin tax 🎃

Reply 4 likes

Avatar of testerdahl
testerdahl

Administrator

2,716 messages 4,596 likes

Didn't Trump have his team write up and pass the contract between the United States, Canada, and Mexico that allows these factories to build these vehicles in the first place?

He was part of the rewrite of NAFTA. His is called the USMCA. Interestingly, I just found out in Canada they call it Canada–United States–Mexico Agreement, or CUSMA. In Mexico they call it, Tratado entre México, Estados Unidos y Canadá, which is abbreviated as T-MEC.

Basically, each country puts their name first.

I had a thought going waaaay back in time to Ross Perot when he was running against Clinton and Bush IIRC. Perot was very much against NAFTA. He foresaw it taking away American jobs and not growing the U.S. economy.

It is interesting to look back on that debate in today's light. On the one hand, he was right. We did lose jobs to Mexico and Canada. On the other hand, you could argue our economy has replaced those jobs in other fields.

Google AI had this to say: "U.S. manufacturing jobs have generally trended downwards since NAFTA was implemented in 1994, with figures around 17.0 million in 1994 decreasing to approximately 12.2 million in 2019 and 12.8 million in 2024. While NAFTA's direct impact is debated, analyses suggest that a significant rise in the U.S. trade deficit with Mexico and Canada post-1993 displaced an estimated 686,700 manufacturing jobs by 2002. This decline is part of a broader trend, as manufacturing employment began falling decades before NAFTA and accelerated significantly after 2000 due to various factors including trade deficits and a shift to service industries."

So many ways to look at things. You could argue many different viewpoints and you'd be right.

Reply 3 likes

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Hilux

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425 messages 730 likes

lol...."national security". That's a stretch...

Well, the original is called the "Chicken Tax", what will this one be called?

Cheeto tax

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D
Dusdaddy

Well-known member

1,354 messages 2,020 likes

Cheeto tax

lol...I guess all the tariffs could be called that.

Reply 1 like

D
Dusdaddy

Well-known member

1,354 messages 2,020 likes

He was part of the rewrite of NAFTA. His is called the USMCA. Interestingly, I just found out in Canada they call it Canada–United States–Mexico Agreement, or CUSMA. In Mexico they call it, Tratado entre México, Estados Unidos y Canadá, which is abbreviated as T-MEC.

So many ways to look at things. You could argue many different viewpoints and you'd be right.

Hard to argue much about it. Generally, our economy grew. But would it have grown more without it? No one can really answer. Just like now, hard to predict the future other than watch leading indicators of trouble.

Reply 3 likes

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