Keir Starmer finally secures trade deal with Donald Trump | Politics | News
Keir Starmer has finally secured an agreement from Donald Trump to implement the trade deal announced by the pair over a month ago. The pair shook hands at their first meeting in Banff, Canada, tonight as the President confirmed he will sign a proclamation for the treaty to get put into action, bringing much-needed relief for Britainโs car industry.
The announcement is a concrete win for Sir Keir Starmer at this summit, during a week in which it is unclear if much else will be agreed between leaders. Downing Street said they had been โworking at paceโ with US counterparts to get the deal over the line this week, and were optimistic of an announcement ahead of the โbrush byโ meeting. It came after Sir Keir refused to guarantee it would be signed off this week when travelling out to Canada, despite telling MPs it would come into force by Wednesday.
Presdient Trump told reporters in Canada โWe signed it, and itโs doneโ, as he confirmed the UK-US trade deal had been signed.
Mr Trump appeared to mistakenly say he had signed a โtrade agreement with the European Unionโ as he stood alongside Sir Keir.
He added: โItโs a fair deal for both. Itโll produce a lot of jobs, a lot of income.โ
Sir Keir replied: โDonald, thank you very much. This now implements on car tariffs and aerospace. A really important agreement. And so this is a very good day for both of our countries, a real sign of strength.โ
Speaking in the Commons on June 4, Sir Keir told MPs that the deal will activate โin just a couple of weeksโ, and โwithin a very short timeโ.
The new trade deal will slash tariffs on British-made cars and aerospace, in what President Trump branded a โgreat dealโ for both parties.
Announcing the deal in early May, Mr Trump said โThis is a really fantastic, historic dayโ, while Sir Keir branded the agreement โhistoricโ.
The deal sees the UK agree to allow more American exports including beef, ethanol and other agricultural products via a fast tracking customs process.
Meanwhile British will be able to send 100,000 cars into the US annually on a tariff of just 10%, down from the current 25% that threw major British companies like Jaguar Land Rover into a tailspin.
However the announcement sparked confusion as the official announcement made no reference to steel, which had originally been earmarked to see tariffs are slashed from 25% to 0%. The industry is becoming increasingly anxious about when the deal would come into force after Donald Trump recently signed a new executive order doubling his existing steel tariffs from 25% to a whopping 50%, which Britain will now also avoid.
Both countries will be able to see beef to each other. And the UK will remove the tariff on ethanol coming into the UK from the US, down to zero. But the general US tariff of 10% on most other UK exports will remain.
