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    Home»Europe»Swiss deploy charm offensive in bid to slash crippling Trump tariffs
    Europe

    Swiss deploy charm offensive in bid to slash crippling Trump tariffs

    Justin M. LarsonBy Justin M. LarsonNovember 13, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    AP President Donald Trump, smiles during his meeting with Syria's President Ahmad al-Sharaa, at the White House in Washington, Monday, Nov. 10, 2025AP

    Trump was pictured on Monday apparently with the Swiss gifts on his desk in the Oval Office

    Swiss ministers are in Washington for talks aimed at slashing US President Donald Trump’s steep 39% tariffs on Switzerland’s exports to the US – the highest rate in Europe.

    Initial attempts by Swiss President Karin Keller Sutter to change Trump’s mind fell on deaf ears. But a visit by business leaders appears to have changed his mind.

    Swiss industry chiefs came to the Oval Office on 4 November bearing gifts, including a Rolex gold watch and a specially engraved gold bar from Swiss-based gold refining company MKS.

    For months the Swiss have been trying to bring down the high US tariff rate which has already hit Switzerland hard.

    Trump’s response to the Swiss president’s bid was that she “was a nice woman, but she did not want to listen”.

    But last week’s private business initiative adopted a more unconventional approach.

    Already this week Trump has said a deal is being worked on to bring the tariffs “a little bit lower… I haven’t set any number”.

    After their talks the Swiss industrialists said in a statement “our entire initiative was undertaken in the spirit of Swiss unity between the private and public sectors”.

    Some business figures, particularly those trading in luxury goods, gold, or commodities, already had contacts in Trump’s circle.

    In September, Trump appeared at the US Open tennis final in the Rolex VIP box hosted by the Swiss watch company’s chief executive Jean Frédéric Dufour.

    MANDEL NGAN/AFP US President Donald Trump (L), alongside Rolex CEO Jean-Frederic Dufour, waves as he arrives to attend the men's singles final tennis match between Spain's Carlos Alcaraz and Italy's Jannik Sinner on the last day of the US Open tennis tournamenMANDEL NGAN/AFP

    Jean Frédéric Dufour and Trump stood together in the Rolex VIP box in New York in September

    The president, apparently guessing what was going on, even asked if Dufour would have been there if Trump had not slapped such steep tariffs on Switzerland.

    Last week Dufour met Trump again, this time in the Oval Office, along with fellow business leaders including Johann Rupert from luxury goods maker Richemont and Marwan Shakarchi from MKS.

    It is quite normal nowadays for any leader heading to the Oval Office to come bearing a gift.

    UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer brought an invitation from King Charles for a lavish state visit. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz offered a framed copy of Trump’s German grandfather’s birth certificate.

    Requests for confirmation of the gifts to the two Swiss companies involved brought a “no comment” from Rolex and MKS.

    But days after the meeting, Trump was pictured in the Oval Office with what looked very much like a Rolex “Datejust” desk clock, produced by the company as a collector’s item, and worth tens of thousands of dollars.

    BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP US President Donald Trump shakes hands with US Senator James Risch, Republican from Idaho during a swearing-in ceremony BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP

    The Rolex desk clock was pictured on Trump’s desk on Monday

    A White House official confirmed the two items had been given to Trump.

    The US president receives thousands of gifts every year and they then become US property, deposited with the National Archives and filed annually by the state department.

    They are eventually transferred to a presidential library. Some gifts can be kept but presidents have to pay federal taxes if they do not come from a close relative.

    In 1969, President Richard Nixon gently refused the gift of a Swiss Omega watch to commemorate the Moon landings.

    Whatever happens to the Swiss gifts, Trump’s stance towards the Swiss appears to be softening, telling reporters he is working on something “to help Switzerland”.

    Swiss economy minister Guy Parmelin and chief trade negotiator Helene Budliger Artieda, who travelled to Washington on Wednesday, are more hopeful than they have been in months, amid suggestions that 39% tariff may be reduced to 15% – the same as Switzerland’s neighbours in the EU.

    In return, promises from the Swiss pharmaceutical giants to build more production plants in the US are already on the table. It is also reported that Swiss International Airlines, whose fleet is primarily Airbus, may pivot towards Boeing.

    But will it be enough? Swiss industry is waiting with bated breath. The tariffs are beginning to bite, with a number of Swiss companies warning they will have to furlough staff if nothing changes.

    The Swiss do have one more highly influential figure they can call on.

    Fifa president and Swiss citizen Gianni Infantino, long a friend of Trump’s, was reportedly urged by some Swiss parliamentarians to try to change the president’s mind.

    As part of preparations for next year’s World Cup in the US, Canada and Mexico, Infantino visited the Oval Office in August bearing the trophy.

    As the cameras rolled he handed it to Trump saying he was “a winner”. The president responded asking “can I keep it? That’s a beautiful piece of gold”.

    Infantino has also announced a brand new Fifa world peace prize, to be announced in Washington DC on 5 December.

    All bets are off as to who that might be.



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