We will
fight Trump’s plans to slap tariffs on the UK – Rachel Reeves
The
chancellor will make the case for free trade as Labour is warned that it must
choose between the United States and the European Union
Toby Helm,
Political Editor
Sat 9 Nov
2024 19.11 GMT
The
chancellor Rachel Reeves will use a keynote speech this week to promote free
and open trade between nations as a cornerstone of UK economic policy, putting
the Labour government on direct collision course with president-elect Donald
Trump.
Reeves will
use her first speech at the Mansion House – an annual showpiece for the
chancellor – to outline a post-budget plan to “go for growth”. But as the UK
government scrambles to respond to Trump’s emphatic victory, and the challenges
it poses for Britain on vital issues of economic and foreign policy, the
chancellor is expected to be clear that she will take the fight to Washington
in defence of free trade.
The issue is
fast emerging as a major test for relations between the incoming Trump
presidency and London, along with their widely differing approaches over
continuing support for Ukraine’s war with Russia. On Friday Trump – who has
promised to slap high tariffs on all imports into the US – wasted no time in
asking the arch-protectionist Robert Lighthizer to return as US trade
representative when he takes over at the White House again in January.
Shortly
before last week’s presidential election Lighthizer blamed free trade for the
loss of domestic manufacturing and linked this to criticism of America’s huge
trade deficit. Such an appointment will cause further unease in the UK
government and increase fears that Trump will follow through his threat to
impose tariffs that could be hugely damaging to the UK economy.
Last
Wednesday Goldman Sachs cut its UK economic growth forecast for 2025 to 1.4%
from 1.6%, citing potential higher US tariffs. The National Institute of
Economic and Social Research said a trade war over tariffs would lower already
sluggish UK growth by 0.7% and 0.5% in the first two years of Trump’s second
term in office.
Writing in
today’s Observer, the former UK ambassador to Washington Kim Darroch says he
expects Trump to carry out his threat of tariffs. Describing the implications
for Britain’s relations with not just the US but also the EU, Darroch says: “On
tariffs I expect the exact opposite of a mere threat.
“I think
Trump will impose tariffs on all US imports immediately and say ‘If you want
them lifted, offer me something to rebalance trade’. The EU will almost
certainly retaliate; and the UK will face a difficult decision. Do we match EU
retaliatory tariffs? Or do we seek a bilateral deal, like a free trade
agreement?
“I think an
FTA would be on offer from Trump as in 2017: but the top US demand, as was the
case then, would be unrestricted access to the UK market for the low-cost
products of the US agricultural sector, hormone treated beef and
chlorine-washed chicken included. So the stark choice would be: side with the
EU or sacrifice our agriculture.”
On Ukraine,
Darroch points out that if Trump backs a peace deal that looks like defeat for
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, with Russia keeping territory it has captured and Ukraine
having to promise never to join Nato, the UK would again be forced to choose
between the EU or Washington.
“So another
difficult decision for the prime minister: try to rally Europe to reject US
ideas and increase support for Ukraine, or pack up our tents, accept defeat and
go home?”
Trump’s
dramatic triumph has prompted intense debate in Westminster about the best way
for Keir Starmer’s administration to respond to such an unpredictable figure in
the White House.
Former UK
ambassador to Paris and the country’s first national security adviser Peter
Ricketts said that Starmer should avoid appearing “too needy” or being too keen
to schmooze him. “I think I would say make your contact with Trump count rather
than just trying to be first to get through the White House door, which has
rather been the tendency of some of your predecessors. The danger of that is
that you expose yourself to embarrassment when he does something you profoundly
disagree with.”
Also writing
in today’s Observer Peter Hyman, who has advised both Tony Blair and Keir
Starmer, said Labour needed to learn lessons about why Americans voted for
Trump because it could fall victim
to a similar
phenomenon in the UK. Too many people, he writes, regarded Trump supporters as
members of the “deluded masses” who were too stupid to see he was a monster,
while in fact many had good reasons to vote for him.
“The truth
is the Democrats lost people – head and heart. They failed at being good
technocrats (the head) with high inflation and open borders. And failed at
telling a story in which struggling working families could feel seen and heard
(the heart).
“This is now
the challenge for the Democrats in the US fighting to win back power, and
Labour in the UK trying to make a success of their victory.
“Trump’s win
could be a moment, like Thatcher’s victory in 1979 where the old rules of
politics are turned on their head and where the building blocks of a new
progressive project need to be rebuilt brick by brick from first principles.”
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