Trump
Administration to Announce Trade Deal with Britain Today
A deal would be a positive sign for
both governments, which have eyed an agreement since President Trump’s first
term.
·
The agreement with the United Kingdom is a full and comprehensive
one that will cement the relationship between the United States and the United Kingdom
for many years to come,
·
A great honor to have the United Kingdom as our FIRST announcement.
·
Mr. Trump is expected to announce the deal at 10 a.m. from
the Oval Office.
·
Both nations have discussed lowering British tariffs on
U.S. cars and farm goods, as well as removing British taxes on U.S. technology companies.
·
But he has left a 10 percent global tariff in place, including
on Britain. Unlike other countries, Britain was not subjected to higher “reciprocal”
tariffs, because it buys more from the United States than it sells to it.
·
Britain is also subject to a 25 percent tariff that Mr.
Trump has placed on foreign steel, aluminum and automobiles, levies that British
officials have been pushing their U.S. counterparts to lift.
·
The Trump administration appears to be nearing deals with
India and Israel, and is continuing to negotiate with South Korea, Japan, Vietnam
and other nations.
·
“Everyone says ‘When, when, when are you going to sign
deals?’” Mr. Trump said, at one point motioning toward Howard Lutnick, his commerce secretary. “We don’t have to sign deals.
We could sign 25 deals right now, Howard, if we wanted to. We don’t have to sign
deals. They have to sign deals with us.”
·
Trade experts have said that Mr. Trump may be intending
to announce far more limited deals than traditional trade agreements.
·
In his first term, Mr. Trump renegotiated several U.S.
trade agreements, including a free-trade agreement with South Korea and NAFTA.
·
He also signed a series of more limited “mini-deals” with
countries in which they reduced tariffs on a few kinds of goods or agreed to talk
about a few sectors.
·
The India deal would lower tariffs between the countries
and secure more access for British firms to India’s insurance and banking sectors,
among other changes.
[ABS News Service/08.05.2025]
President Trump is expected to announce
on Thursday that the United States will strike a “comprehensive” trade agreement
with Britain.
Mr. Trump teased a new trade agreement
in a social media post on Wednesday night, though he did not specify which nation
was part of the deal. On Thursday (08.05.2025), a senior British official confirmed
that a deal with the United States had been reached.
And on Thursday morning, Mr. Trump was
back on social media to confirm that it was, in fact, a
deal with the U.K.
“The agreement with the United Kingdom
is a full and comprehensive one that will cement the relationship between the United
States and the United Kingdom for many years to come,” he wrote. “Because of our
long time history and allegiance together, it is a great
honor to have the United Kingdom as our FIRST announcement. Many other deals, which
are in serious stages of negotiation, to follow!”
Mr. Trump is expected to announce the
deal at 10 a.m. from the Oval Office.
The British official, who spoke on the
condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, did not offer details,
beyond saying that the deal would be good for both Britain and the United States.
The agreement would be the first deal
announced since Mr. Trump imposed stiff tariffs on dozens of America’s trading partners.
He later paused those temporarily in order to allow other nations to reach agreements
with the United States.
A deal between the United States and
Britain could be a significant win for both countries, which have long sought closer
economic cooperation.
Details of the agreement were not immediately
clear. Both nations have discussed lowering British tariffs on U.S. cars and farm
goods, as well as removing British taxes on U.S. technology companies. It also was
not clear whether the agreement had actually been finalized.
Timothy C. Brightbill, an international
trade attorney at Wiley Rein, said the announcement would probably be “just an agreement
to start the negotiations, identifying a framework of issues to be discussed in
the coming months.”
“We suspect that tariff rates, nontariff
barriers and digital trade are all on the list — and there are difficult issues
to address on all of these,” he added.
The Trump administration has been trying
to cajole other countries into reaching quick trade deals with the United States.
The president imposed punishing tariffs on dozens of its trading partners on April
2, but quickly backtracked after panic ensued in the bond market. Mr. Trump paused
most of those tariffs for 90 days so that the United States could negotiate trade
deals with other nations.
Britain is also
subject to a 25 percent tariff that Mr. Trump has placed on foreign steel, aluminum
and automobiles, levies that British officials have been pushing their U.S. counterparts
to lift.
Mr. Trump’s interest in striking a trade
deal with Britain dates back to his first term, when his advisers negotiated with
the country but didn’t finalize an agreement. British officials have also been eyeing
a trade agreement with the United States since Brexit, as a way to offset weaker
relations with Europe. In the Biden administration, British officials continued
to push for a deal with the United States but made little progress.
For Britain’s prime minister, Keir Starmer,
the trade deal would offer vindication for his assiduous cultivation of Mr. Trump.
During his visit to the Oval Office in February, Mr. Starmer turned up with an invitation from
King Charles III for the president to make a rare second state visit to
Britain.
The Trump administration
appears to be nearing deals with India and Israel, and is continuing to negotiate
with South Korea, Japan, Vietnam and other nations. Still, Mr. Trump
once again displayed his unpredictable approach to economic policy on Tuesday when
he downplayed the prospect of trade
deals, saying other countries needed such agreements more than
the United States.
“Everyone says
‘When, when, when are you going to sign deals?’” Mr. Trump said, at one point motioning
toward Howard Lutnick, his commerce secretary. “We don’t
have to sign deals. We could sign 25 deals right now, Howard, if we wanted to. We
don’t have to sign deals. They have to sign deals with us.”
Trade experts have
said that Mr. Trump may be intending to announce far more limited deals than traditional
trade agreements, which cover most trade between countries and require
congressional approval. Historically, free-trade agreements have taken the United
States more than a year to negotiate.
In his first term,
Mr. Trump renegotiated several U.S. trade agreements, including a free-trade agreement
with South Korea and NAFTA. But he also
signed a series of more limited “mini-deals” with countries in which they reduced
tariffs on a few kinds of goods or agreed to talk about a few sectors.
British officials have also been negotiating
with the European Union, and on Tuesday agreed to a trade deal
with India. The India deal would lower tariffs between the
countries and secure more access for British firms to India’s insurance and banking
sectors, among other changes. The announcement followed nearly three years of
negotiations.