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Somebody pour them a stiff drink.

New York restaurant and bar owners are bracing for the impact of announced tariffs that could shake and stir the hospitality industry — if they ever go into effect.

President Donald Trump’s recent threat of 200% tariffs on all wine, champagne and spirits from the European Union has sommeliers, cocktail slingers and proprietors — from haute hot spots to laid-back watering holes — wondering what the White House will serve up next.

New York restaurant and bar owners are bracing for the impact of announced tariffs that could shake and stir the hospitality industry. Stefano Giovannini

With Others, a wine bar in Williamsburg, recently celebrated its first anniversary — a joyful occasion marred by a sense of impending doom, owner Shanna Nasiri told The Post.

“Tariffs on Old World wines, especially French and Italian, are definitely concerning,” Nasiri said. “Those regions are the backbone of my list and where I have the deepest connections, so shifting away from them to keep prices approachable would be a big change.”

Shanna Nasiri, of With Others wine bar, has bought extra cases of French and Italian wine before the tariffs’ price hike hits. Stefano Giovannini

She figured, “Margins are already tight, and running a wine bar in Williamsburg is expensive.” 

Blocks away, Bar Madonna, another haute haunt, has a plan of action should drink disaster strike.

“All the wine we carry is Italian wine,” owner Eric Madonna said. “But if we have to switch to domestic, we will.”

Eric Madonna of Bar Madonna said it only carries Italian wine. Stefano Giovannini

Open since last year, the Boot-centric boozer tows a line between modern and old-school Italian bar — relying almost solely on old country imports.

Madonna already knows how he’ll stave off at least some of the blunt impact — if and when tariffs go into effect.

April 2 is the promised start date for tariffs, and Trump has suggested he may not go as hard on some imports.

“I may give a lot of countries breaks,” he said Monday. “It’s reciprocal, but we might be even nicer than that. You know, we’ve been very nice to a lot of countries for a long time.”

“We started to stock up on bottles early when we heard the news,” Madonna said. “But there is only so much space for storage in our building.”

Jahdea Gildin, sommelier at the East Village restaurant Luthun, said the tariffs will be “devastating for the majority of the restaurant industry.”

”Everyone already knows that restaurants run on a very fine margin, of which the majority of their profit, if any, is made off of alcohol sales,” the wine whiz said.

“There will still be price points that are available, but it will force the quality level to drop if maintaining profitability. While this may not directly affect all places, it will certainly affect many, especially the small local businesses that are the heartbeat of New York City.” 

President Donald Trump proposed 200% tariffs on all wine, champagne and spirits from the European Union. Francis Chung / Pool via CNP / SplashNews.com
“But if we have to switch to domestic, we will,” Madonna said. Stefano Giovannini

Others are taking a glass-half-full approach. 

Abraham Merchant, president and CEO of Merchants Hospitality — the company behind NYC’s two Philippe Chow locations, Ophelia Lounge in the Beekman Tower and Art Bar in the West Village — sees an opportunity, “especially for American producers.”

“The European Union, one of the most hostile and abusive taxing and tariffing authorities in the World, which was formed for the sole purpose of taking advantage of the United States, has just put a nasty 50% Tariff on Whisky,” Trump, 78, posted on his Truth Social. Getty Images
According to Nasiri, “Margins are already tight, and running a wine bar in Williamsburg is expensive.”  Stefano Giovannini

“At our properties, we are proactively exploring ways to highlight more domestic spirits, wines and craft beverages, which could be a silver lining of these changes,” Merchant told The Post.

“The US has an incredible selection of high-quality products, and this could be an opportunity for local and regional producers to gain more visibility in NYC’s competitive hospitality scene.”

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