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Transcript: Trump Hosts Ireland’s Micheál Martin in the Oval Office

Read the full transcript of President Trump hosts Ireland’s Taoiseach Micheál Martin in the Oval Office on March 12, 2025.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Trump Hosts Ireland’s Taoiseach in Oval Office

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Thank you very much. It’s a great honor to have Micheál Martin, Taoiseach of Ireland. It’s a special place and he’s a very special guy. He did it the hard way also. He served and then he took a little time off and then he served again. I’ve heard about that. It happens on occasion. He’s done very well and we knew each other from a long time ago. It’s a great honor to have you in the Oval Office and have you at the White House. We have tremendous business relationships with Ireland and that will only get stronger. The relationship we have personally and every other way is very, very strong and very, very good. I just want to welcome you to Washington, D.C. and to our country and thank you very much.

TAOISEACH MICHEÁL MARTIN: May I thank you, President? It’s a great honor for me to be here to celebrate St. Patrick’s with you. I thank you for your hospitality and the warmth of your reception. I commend you in terms of the work that you’re doing, particularly in terms of the pursuit of peace, which we discussed earlier. I think that’s going well. You really have, in the first 100 days of this government, you’ve done some extraordinary things very quickly. Everybody’s watching in that respect. Thank you. Delighted to be here. It’s an honor to be here.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, it’s a great honor to have you on. Special people, very special people. I know a lot of Irish and growing up in New York, I know a couple of your people that used to live in that beautiful Ireland and now they’re here, but they love your country very much. They have a great feeling for your country. They have and a lot come back for holidays and stuff like that. Checking out their family ancestry and things like that. Great, fantastic people.

TAOISEACH MICHEÁL MARTIN: Some go to Doonbeg as well.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: We love Doonbeg. I love them. I don’t know if I’ll ever see it again. Maybe I won’t, but I think I will. We’ll get there. We’re going to get there. It’s a beautiful place. It’s a wonderful place. Any questions?

Questions from Reporters

REPORTER: Mr. President, how worried are you about the country of Ireland from the EU, which was announced yesterday? Also, how worried should Ireland be, given the fact that it has a massive trade surplus with the U.S. of over $50 billion? Are you marked by nervousness?

PRESIDENT TRUMP: Well, I don’t think he looks nervous to me. And if he was nervous, he wouldn’t show it. Now, we do have a massive deficit with Ireland because Ireland was very smart. They took our pharmaceutical companies away from presidents that didn’t know what they were doing. And it’s too bad that happened. It’s a tremendous job. Look, the Irish are smart. We are smart people. And you took our pharmaceutical companies and other companies, but, you know, through taxation and proper taxation, they made it very, very good for companies to move over there. And we had presidents and people that were involved in this that had no idea what they were doing, and they lost big segments of our economy.

The European Union treats us very badly. They have for years. I saw that. I had it out with them in my first term. It did well, but we had to solve other problems, and we did. But the European Union’s been very tough, and it’s our turn to, you know, we get a turn at that also. But they have not been fair. They sue our companies and win massive amounts of money. They sued Apple, won $17 billion, and they use that for other reasons, I guess, or to run the European Union. So I’m not knocking it. They’re doing what they should be doing, perhaps, for the European Union, but it does create ill will.

And as you know, we’re going to be doing reciprocal tariffs. So whatever they charge us, we’re charging them. Nobody can complain about that. Whatever it is, it doesn’t even matter what it is. If they charge us, if they charge us 25 or 20 percent or 10 percent or 2 percent or 200 percent, then that’s what we’re charging them. And so I don’t know why people get upset about that, because there’s nothing more fair than that.

And we had a problem with Ontario, and they dropped that. When I let them know what we were going to be doing, they dropped it immediately. So I’m glad, because electricity shouldn’t be playing with electricity. It affects people’s lives. Actually, their life, I mean, it can affect, depending on whether it can affect their life. So we can’t do that. And it doesn’t make sense that our country allows electricity to be made in another country and sold into us. Who did that deal for the United States, okay? I looked at that long ago, and I said that’s not something that’s very smart.

So we’ve had a lot of bad trade policies, and yet we’re doing very well right now. But we’re doing well because I won the election. If I didn’t win the election, you would add a very bad period. I think a lot of the stock market going down was because of a really bad four years that we had, when you look at inflation and all of the other problems that were, I mean, wars and inflation and so many other problems.

But we’re going to have very good years. We’re going to have, we had, I don’t know if you saw, a little thing like the cost of eggs.