Tax Talk: Mamdani’s Ambitious Agenda Requires New Revenue. What Could That Look Like?

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“The ultra wealthy and the most profitable corporations are going to fight any revenue raiser,” said Brahvan Ranga, campaign manager of Invest in Our New York, a coalition of organizations pushing for progressive tax reforms. “But the political winds are at our back in a way that hasn’t been the case in years.”

Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Gov. Kathy Hochul announcing an expanded child care initiative earlier this month. (Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office)

Zohran Mamdani won the mayoral election resoundingly by running on reshaping New York to be affordable and manageable for working people. But many of his audacious plans require money—lots of it. 

With the exception of property taxes, the city can’t raise taxes on its own and must always go to Albany seeking votes. The mayor is asking for dollars right as the federal government is slashing funding (and cutting health insurance) and while Gov. Kathy Hochul—who has largely opposed raising taxes—and the legislature, who clutch the state’s purse strings, are preparing to run for re-election. 

Much of Mayor Mamdani’s success may rest on figuring out what taxes they’ll find politically palatable. He faces a larger-than-expected city budget deficient this year—what officials blamed on under-budgeting by the Adams administration—as he gets ready to negotiate his first spending plan due in July.

On the state level, the governor’s budget office has in recent months said revenue streams looked rosy and that taxes are “a last resort.” Hochul’s $260 billion state budget proposal, unveiled last week, avoided any such hikes. “You can make historic investments without raising income taxes,” the governor said

That’s not the attitude progressives are looking for, said Jasmine Gripper, co-director of the New York Working Families Party. Gov. Hochul “has made bold promises and under-delivered. We’ve been underwhelmed by the investment.”

She hopes that Mamdani’s win showed that the way to energize voters is with bold ideas. “We don’t want to be underwhelmed anymore,” she said. “The pressure from Zohran’s campaign means the demands of what New Yorkers are expecting are high.”

Brahvan Ranga, campaign manager of Invest in Our New York—a coalition of organizations pushing for tax reforms—points to a new poll that shows super majorities of New Yorkers supporting legislation that would raise revenue through progressive taxes.

That’s what Mamdani wants, too. His campaign plans called for raising an estimated $9 billion annually by hiking the corporate tax rate to 11.5 percent (to match neighboring New Jersey), and by adding a 2 percent income tax on anyone earning more than $1 million a year.

In a statement last week, Mamdani praised Hochul’s budget plan for making “meaningful investments” but reiterated his call to tax the rich. “It is time to ask New York City’s wealthiest and large corporations to pay their fair share,” he said. (Efforts to reach the new mayor for this story were unsuccessful.)

“The ultra wealthy and the most profitable corporations are going to fight any revenue raiser,” Ranga said. “But the political winds are at our back in a way that hasn’t been the case in years.”

The question becomes what tax plans to push forward with that wind. 

One idea that has circulated in recent years is a pied-à-terre tax. The tax would target multimillion dollar second homes in the city owned by the ultra wealthy. 

“We need money to run the city so a tax on the wealth of the people that own multimillion dollar homes and are not living in them makes sense,” said Morris Pearl, the chair of the group Patriotic Millionaires, which advocates for higher taxes for people in their own bracket. 

The pied-à-terre tax became popular with the public and some officials a decade ago, when faceless oligarchs from other countries and American billionaires snapped up exorbitantly-priced apartments that they didn’t even live in. 

Luxury towers along Manhattan’s “Billionaires’ Row” overlooking Central Park. (Felix Lipov/Shutterstock)

It seems like an easy target, given the minuscule, elite constituency. But lobbyists killed the legislation in 2019. In 2023, then-Comptroller Brad Lander again pushed the idea, but it has yet to gain serious traction and its opponents remain implacable. “The real estate lobby has lots of powerful friends in state government and so I would imagine that could be an obstacle,” Ranga said.

James Whelan, President of the Real Estate Board of New York (REBNY) said in an emailed statement that the tax is “a fundamentally flawed idea” that would cost jobs and discourage investment.

Ironically, the bigger issue for the pied-à-terre tax is that the people who support the idea rank it low on their priority list. If Gov. Hochul threw her weight behind it, progressives would welcome it, Gripper said. But she and her allies are not pushing for it. 

“Progressive groups have agreed on a set of revenue raisers that we’re committed to fighting for and a few years ago we actually set aside the pied-à-terre tax,” Gripper said. “We’re not against it. It’s simply that it doesn’t raise enough revenue. It doesn’t get us to closing the affordability crisis.”

“It doesn’t change the macro budget outlook of the state or the city,” adds Nathan Gusdorf, executive director of the Fiscal Policy Institute.

(This is also true of the commuter tax, which was foolishly relinquished decades ago by Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver. While there’s some disagreement—Gripper calls it regressive for working people commuting from the suburbs—from the city’s perspective, it’s “a travesty that it was repealed,” Gusdorf said. “You’re earning your income here and the city has a right to tax people on that income earned here.” But it’s not politically palatable and doesn’t bring in enough revenue to make it worth fighting for, he added.)

Ranga likes the idea that the pied-à-terre tax reflects the city’s shift in priorities and has widespread public support, so he believes it could be part of the puzzle. But he doesn’t think it should be a focal point in the coming legislative cycle. The pied-à-terre tax would reap hundreds of millions of dollars, which is “pretty minimal” compared to “both the scale of the federal cuts and the the scale of the new programs we’re proposing,” he said.

And while it may disincentivize some of the worst practices on the housing front, he’d rather see a fight to “pass legislation to strengthen tenants rights and rent stabilization or for legislation to enact social housing to massively construct beautiful mixed income, affordable housing for all New Yorkers.”

Ultimately, he said, the pied-à-terre tax falls short because “it can’t replace bolder proposals either on the housing front or the revenue front.”

Instead, Gripper, Ranga and Gusdorf are all thinking big. “We want to target revenue that puts us in the billions of dollars in order to actually fund things like universal childcare,” Gripper said, referring to one of the new mayor’s goals (Gov. Hochul recently announced that the state will fund the first two years of an expanded free child care program, but funding beyond that is still to be determined).

Gripper said raising the personal income tax on just the absolute wealthiest could generate $20 billion, a state capital gains tax could raise about $12 billion, boosting the corporate tax yields $7 billion and an heirs tax reaps $4 billion. 

There’s also the idea of a wealth tax—applied to a person’s total assets, rather than their annual earnings—like the national one promoted by Elizabeth Warren. “We have to get beyond the personal income tax,” Gripper said.

Pearl, of the Patriotic Millionaires, notes that he has virtually no income, so he is barely taxed. “I think these things should be on the table,” he said. “We need the school teachers, doormen, bus drivers and others who work here to be able to afford to live here. The governor should think about them, not the small number of people from whom she’s chosen to get support.”

But Gusdorf said there are potential constitutional limitations on a wealth tax in New York (although Gripper believes they could win on challenges in court). He adds that while it’s a good policy, it also introduces unknowns, from potential court battles to details of how to fully capture the value of the wealthy’s assets. 

He cites an adage that “an old tax is a good tax because any tax is complex and it takes so long to work out the kinks and there’s so much to fight over.” This argument applies to the pied-à-terre tax, too. “People think the income tax is toxic, so we need a new tax but that’s thinking backwards,” he said. 

“Everything that seems appealing about doing a new tax is going to be a nightmare. The income tax works. People pay it. We have regulations and legal and accounting expertise to deal with it,” Gusdorf added. “It’s the one thing where you raise it a little bit and you’re going to get a lot more money.”

Gripper said raising the personal income tax on people making more than $25 million would have plenty of public support. “That feels really easy and tangible,” she said.

Gusdorf adds that The Fiscal Policy Institute has plenty of research showing that, despite fear-mongering by the right, rich New Yorkers really don’t move out in response to the income tax. (The Institute’s studies show that working class people leave at a much higher rate than the wealthy, driven out by the cost of living.)

“The millionaires and billionaires are not going anywhere,” adds Gripper. “It is their playground. They love the museums. They love the parties.  They love New York. We’re just asking them to pay their fair share.”

New York Stock Exchange building in Manhattan’s Financial District. “The millionaires and billionaires are not going anywhere,” Gripper says. (JJFarq/Shutterstock)

Gusdorf also disputes the notion that raising the corporate tax rate would harm businesses. Sixteen states have a higher corporate tax rate than New York’s, he said, and Mamdani’s goal is simply to match New Jersey’s rates. The tax is not based on where a company is headquartered, but on how much business a company does in New York, and it’s only paid by the approximately 1,000 most profitable corporations. “It hits a small number of businesses and is structured so there’s no economic disincentive effect,” he said.

Gripper said progressive policy groups have also tinkered with their proposal on the heirs tax to make sure it only hits those “who are about to have the biggest wealth transfer in history”—raising the threshold and creating safeguards to protect people who inherit valuable property that they want to live on or use for farming. 

Ranga hopes that Mamdani’s election is a game changer for all those legislators looking for voters’ support this year. 

“Voters are saying the government should make our lives better and they should do so by making the ultra-rich and the most powerful corporations pay their fair share,” he said, adding that legislators and the governor should realize this extends beyond the five boroughs to the state’s smaller cities and even rural areas. “If you’re running for re-election, you’ve got to be responsive to that.”

Gripper notes that the governor has “outsized power in the budget process” but she believes that if the legislature “holds firm we can get good things done.”

“I am confident that one or more of these revenue raisers will get passed this year,” she said.

 To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org

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The post Tax Talk: Mamdani’s Ambitious Agenda Requires New Revenue. What Could That Look Like? appeared first on City Limits.

Captain America vs. Captain Clutch: Knight and Poulin face off for 5th and perhaps last Winter Games

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By JOHN WAWROW

Kelly Pannek has spent the past decade enjoying a front-row view of U.S. teammate Hilary Knight and Canada’s Marie-Philip Poulin one-upping the other in a fierce, friendly rivalry involving two of the most accomplished players in the history of women’s hockey.

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Playful and easygoing as the two are away from the rink, Pannek has witnessed the intensity, gamesmanship and dialed-in ability to step up their games in the biggest moments.

“They push each other,” Pannek said, before recalling the Americans’ 6-3 gold-medal win over Canada at the 2023 world championships.

“I laugh actually because Poulin scores on the 5-on-3, and she shot it right over Hilary’s foot,” Pannek said. “Hilary took that personally, and then scored three goals and won us that game.”

Knight doesn’t dispute it. “Yeah, I was pissed,” she said, laughing. And, yes, it mattered who scored.

“When a great player finds the back of the net against you, and it’s your job to keep it out of the net, you’re like, ‘All right, let’s go,’” Knight said.

Captain America vs. Captain Clutch

The gripping back-and-forth swings of gold-medal highs and silver-medal lows have played out over some 17 years and more than 100 games on the international stage between two players with altogether different backgrounds. Knight grew up in the Chicago suburbs, and Poulin in Beauceville, a rural town an hour’s drive south of Quebec City.

It will be in Milan where the two meet next month for a fifth and potentially final time at the Winter Games.

“If that’s the case, it’s a shame,” Team Canada coach Troy Ryan said. “It’s been a privilege to watch and to be witness to the back and forth.”

They are guaranteed one more meeting in a preliminary round matchup on Feb. 10. There is a good chance they will face off again for gold nine days later. At 36, Knight already has announced these Games will be her last. At 34, Poulin has not shed light on her Olympic future.

Veteran U.S. defender Lee Stecklein still can’t fathom the thought.

“I’ll believe Hilary’s done when I see it. I don’t believe her,” she said with a laugh.

The numbers are astounding for two generational icons, and first to earn International Ice Hockey Federation female player of the year honors, Knight in 2024 and Poulin last June.

Knight has the edge with 10 world championship gold medals to Poulin’s four. Knight also holds the world tournament record for goals (67), assists (53) and points (120).

Poulin has shined at the Olympics, earning her “Captain Clutch” nickname by scoring the gold medal-winning goal three times. She is second behind Knight on the world championship list with 89 points, and second on the Olympic list with 35 points, trailing former Canadian teammate Hayley Wickenheiser.

“I think it just goes to show that we want to be the best player every single time we hop on the ice, specifically also against one another,” Knight said. “And we’re going to put on a show.”

National icons

The two are the faces of women’s hockey in their respective nations.

“It takes a really special person to be able to withstand — especially in Canada — that amount of pressure and responsibility. And she does it with grace,” former U.S. Olympian Meghan Duggan said of Poulin.

“Similar to Hilary,” added Duggan, Knight’s teammate from 2007 to 2018. “Her ability to just naturally show up in big moments is unlike anything I’ve ever seen.”

FILE- United States forward Hilary Knight (21) and Canada forward Marie-Philip Poulin (29) battle during the second period of the gold medal game at women’s world hockey championships in Brampton, Ontario, Sunday, April 16, 2023. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press via AP, File)

They first met on the international stage at the 2009 world championships, where Poulin made her Team Canada debut. It didn’t take long for each to begin taking notice of the other.

Poulin’s first memory was falling into the boards on a failed backcheck as Knight broke free to score in overtime of a 3-2 win in the gold-medal game at the 2011 world championships in Zurich.

“Yeah, that’s how it started,” Poulin said, laughing.

For Knight, her first recollection of Poulin came at the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver.

“She got loose on the draw, and it’s in the back of our net pretty quickly,” Knight said of Poulin scoring her second goal in Canada’s 2-0 gold-medal win. “Our center drops her and I’m just like, ‘Oh, my gosh, here we go.’”

They’ve gone at it ever since, and even spent a season as teammates in Montreal with the now-defunct Canadian Women’s Hockey League.

Their legacies include playing instrumental roles in the growth of women’s hockey, and in helping establish the Professional Women’s Hockey League. The league, now in its third year, grew from six to eight teams this season, with more expansion on the horizon.

“They’re both legends,” said PWHL executive Jayna Hefford, a Hockey Hall of Famer. “I think it’s a special moment for women’s hockey to have the two of them facing off maybe one last time. Who knows, right? Who knows what they might do? I’ll feel like a fan watching it and just trying to enjoy it.”

Knight has found peace in already calling these her last Olympics. And yet, she continues dropping hints to suggest a potential change of mind.

“Unless you convince me otherwise,” Knight said in November when asked if she might get the itch again. “Yeah, maybe. We’ll see.”

Settled in Seattle

Two months later, while promoting Hershey’s chocolate, Knight excitedly described the electric welcome the PWHL has received during her first season in Seattle.

“It definitely gives you a new life, a new breath,” she told The Associated Press. “It’s really heartfelt, and it only deepens that want for me to play even longer.”

She has not lost her scoring touch. Last season in Boston, Knight finished tied for the PWHL lead with 29 points. This season, she has two goals and nine points in 13 games.

Count Poulin among the doubters, saying, “We’ll see,” on whether these might be Knight’s last Olympics.

Not in question is Poulin’s admiration.

“She’s always holding herself to the highest standards. And she’s done it with tremendous professionalism and grace,” Poulin said. “She wants to leave the sport in a better place, and she has done it. And I hope she can finish with her head held high.”

AP Hockey Writer Stephen Whyno contributed to this report.

AP Winter Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

Layoffs are piling up, heightening worker anxiety. Here are some of the biggest job cuts recently

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By WYATTE GRANTHAM-PHILIPS, Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — As layoffs pile up, workers are feeling increasingly anxious about the job market.

In the U.S., economists have said that businesses are largely at a “no-hire, no fire” standstill, leading many to limit new work, if not pause openings entirely amid economic uncertainty. Hiring has stagnated overall — with the country adding a meager 50,000 jobs last month, down from a revised figure of 56,000 in November.

But a growing list of companies are also cutting jobs. Employers have initiated layoffs across sectors — with many pointing to rising operational costs that span from President Donald Trump’s barrage of new tariffs, stubborn inflation and shifts in spending from consumers, whose outlook on the U.S. economy recently plummeted to its lowest level since 2014. At the same time, some businesses are reducing their workforces as they redirect money to artificial intelligence, often baked into wider corporate restructuring.

Here are a few of the largest job cuts announced recently.

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Amazon cuts about 16,000 corporate jobs in the latest round of layoffs

Amazon

E-commerce giant Amazon slashed about 16,000 corporate roles on Wednesday — just three months after laying off another 14,000 workers. In its latest round of layoffs, Amazon cited restructuring aimed at “removing bureaucracy” in its operations, but the cuts also arrive as the company continues to ramp up spending on AI. CEO Andy Jassy previously said that he anticipated generative AI to reduce Amazon’s corporate workforce.

UPS

On Tuesday, United Parcel Service said it plans to cut up to 30,000 operational jobs this year — notably as the package company continues to reduce the number of Amazon shipments it handles amid wider turnaround efforts. UPS said these cuts will be made through a voluntary buyout offer for full-time drivers and attrition. The reductions come on top of a combined 48,000 job cuts that the company disclosed in 2025.

Tyson Foods

Late last year, Tyson Foods said it would be closing a plant that employed 3,200 people in Lexington, Nebraska — bringing job losses for nearly a third of the small town’s population of 11,000. The layoffs began on Jan. 20, but the company notified state officials that it was temporarily retaining under 300 workers to help complete the closure. Tyson in November also announced plans to cut one of two shifts at an Amarillo, Texas plant, eliminating an additional 1,700 jobs.

HP

Also in November, HP said it expected to lay off between 4,000 and 6,000 employees. The cuts are part of a wider initiative from the computer maker to streamline operations, which includes adopting AI to increase productivity. The company aims to complete these actions by the end of the 2028 fiscal year.

Verizon

Verizon began laying off more than 13,000 employees in November. In a staff memo announcing the cuts, CEO Dan Schulman said that the telecommunications giant needed to simplify operations and “reorient” the entire company.

Nestlé

In mid-October, Nestlé said it would be cutting 16,000 jobs globally — as part of wider cost cutting aimed at reviving its financial performance amid headwinds like rising commodity costs and U.S. imposed tariffs. The Swiss food giant said the layoffs would take place over the next two years.

Novo Nordisk

Also in September, Danish pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk said it would cut 9,000 jobs, about 11% of its workforce. The company — which makes drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy — said the layoffs were part of wider restructuring, as it works to sell more obesity and diabetes medications amid rising competition.

Intel

Intel has moved to shed thousands of jobs as the struggling chipmaker works to revive its business. Last year, CEO Lip-Bu Tan said Intel expected to end 2025 with 75,000 “core” workers, excluding subsidiaries, through layoffs and attrition. That’s down from 99,500 core employees reported the end of 2024. The company previously announced a 15% workforce reduction.

Procter & Gamble

Last summer, Procter & Gamble said it would cut up to 7,000 jobs over the next two years, 6% of the company’s global workforce. The maker of Tide detergent and Pampers diapers said the cuts were part of a wider restructuring — also arriving amid tariff pressures.

Microsoft

Microsoft initiated two rounds of mass layoffs last year — first impacting 6,000 and then another 9,000 positions. The tech giant cited “organizational changes,” but the cuts also arrived as the company spends heavily on AI.

Other companies that have taken job cuts recently

General Motors cut about 1,700 jobs across manufacturing sites in Michigan and Ohio last fall, in addition to hundreds of temporary layoffs for other employees.
Skydance-owned Paramount initiated roughly 1,000 layoffs in October, and later announced plans to cut another 1,600 jobs as part of diverstures in Argentina and Chile.
Target in October moved to eliminate about 1,800 corporate positions.
ConocoPhillips announced plans to lay off up to a quarter of its workforce, or between 2,600 and 3,250 workers, taking most of the cuts before the end of 2025.
Lufthansa Group says it will shed 4,000 jobs by 2030.

The EU is seeking new trade partnerships. Here’s why

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By SAM McNEIL

BRUSSELS (AP) — The ambitious free trade agreement between the European Union and India underscores the EU’s efforts to ink new global partnerships at a time when the Trump administration has rattled a continent deeply tied to Washington on trade, defense and diplomacy.

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The agreement announced Tuesday reflects a new priority for the 27-nation EU, the world’s largest trading bloc, after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to impose tariffs because of opposition to American control of Greenland, only to back off days later. It follows trade deals struck or pending over the past year with India, Japan, Indonesia, Mexico and the five Mercosur nations of South America.

“The international order we relied upon for decades is no longer a given,” said Nikos Christodoulides, president of Cyprus, in a speech last week at the European Parliament. He was outlining Cyprus’ priorities as the island nation begins its six-month term at the helm of the EU.

“This moment calls for action, decisive, credible and united action. It calls for a union that is more autonomous and open to the world,” said Christodoulides, echoing widespread sentiment across the bloc.

Brussels’ deals across the world

After attending a military parade in New Delhi, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen signed the free trade agreement to deepen economic and strategic ties with India. She called it the “mother of all deals.”

The pact could affect as many as 2 billion people and slash tariffs on nearly 97% of EU exports to India like cars and wine, and 99% of India’s shipments of goods like textiles and medicines to the EU.

“Europe and India need each other today like never before,” said Garima Mohan, a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund. She said that both Brussels and New Delhi had long sought closer ties as a counterweight to China’s economic rise. But the Trump administration’s newly aggressive stance on economic and security issues clinched the deal.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, center, welcomes European Council President Antonio Costa, left and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen before their meeting in New Delhi, India, Tuesday, Jan. 27,2026. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup)

“This movement towards diversification, looking for new partners as well as building self-reliance was precipitated by the tensions with China and really driven home by the fracture of the trans-Atlantic partnership,” Mohan said. The deal “only came to pass at this particular geopolitical juncture, and that says something of the world we live in.”

The EU struck its first trade deal in July with Indonesia. Two weeks ago, von der Leyen signed a deal with the Mercosur nations of South America that was decades in the making to create a free trade market of more than 700 million people – and she’s said she has the authority to implement it despite objections raised by European Parliament.

The EU has also upgraded ties with Japan, South Korea and Australia, Pacific nations wary of Beijing’s strategic ambitions and Washington’s turbulent politics. Canada is “knocking on our door” to do the same, said Manfred Weber, head of the European People’s Party, Europe’s largest political bloc.

“There is a hope that things will change given the importance of the U.S. for us … but there is a realization now that we are a bit more alone in this world,” said Ivano di Carlo, a senior policy analyst at the European Policy Centre.

A burgeoning continental defense industry

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine drove the EU to create financial tools to boost the bloc’s defense industry and infrastructure like trains, roads and ports — but the Trump administration’s criticism of the continent’s low levels of defense spending kicked those initiatives into overdrive.

Denmark’s prime minister has said Russia could pose a credible security threat to the EU by the end of the decade and that defense industries in Europe and Ukraine must be able to thwart that threat.

France has led calls for Europe to build “strategic autonomy,” and support for its stance has grown since the Trump administration warned last year that its security priorities lie elsewhere and that the Europeans would have to fend for themselves.

Shortly after Trump began his second term in the White House, EU leaders agreed to increase their own defense budgets. As a priority, 150 billion euros ($162 billion) in loans are designated for air and missile defense, artillery systems, ammunition, drones and air transport, as well as cyber systems, artificial intelligence and electronic warfare.

Industry leaders and experts across Europe have said truly self-sufficient military power would require overcoming a decades-long reliance on the U.S. as well as the fragmentation along national lines of Europe’s own defense industry.

Stocks in Europe’s major arms makers like Leonardo (Italy), Rheinmetall (Germany), Thales (France) and Saab (Sweden) have all been on the rise.

An energy dependency

While trying to cut its energy ties with Russia, the EU began buying more U.S. energy, according to the Institute for Energy Economic and Financial Analysis. But that too is risky for the bloc, said Dan Jørgensen, European commissioner for energy and housing, during a North Sea Summit in Hamburg, Germany on Monday.

The EU imports 14.5% of its oil and 60% of its liquefied natural gas from the U.S, according to the EU statistics agency Eurostat.

Jørgensen said the EU should seek further energy independence by investing in energy production and alternate suppliers.

“We do not want to replace one dependency for another — we need to diversify,” Jørgensen said.

Brussels is eyeing sources in the eastern Mediterranean and the Gulf, where negotiations are underway for a free trade deal with the United Arab Emirates.

“Decoupling is easier said than done,” but forging new global relationships gives the EU an edge in dealing with Beijing, Moscow and Washington, Mohan said.