Nigel
Farage offers to work with Peter Mandelson to secure US-UK trade deal
Labour party
divided on whether incoming US ambassador should lean on Reform leader’s ties
with Donald Trump
PA Media
Tue 24 Dec
2024 23.50 GMT
Nigel Farage
has said he would be willing to help Peter Mandelson negotiate with the Trump
administration, after the Labour grandee was confirmed as Westminster’s new
ambassador to the US.
Lord
Mandelson has indicated he believes the Reform UK leader, a friend of Donald
Trump, could serve as a link between the UK and the Republican president-elect.
But Downing
Street would not be drawn on whether Keir Starmer would like the political
veteran to work with Farage, saying when asked only that the prime minister had
“already started to begin to build a relationship” with Trump.
Farage has
previously offered to use his relationship with Trump and his team to act as a
bridge between them and Downing Street. He told the Telegraph he would be
willing to work with people in Labour if it was in the “national interest”.
“I am no fan
of any of the people in the Labour party, but if it is in the national interest
I have always thought I could be a useful asset if they want to use that - but
if they don’t, more fool them,” the Clacton MP said.
Farage
claimed he could help with talks on trade, tariffs, intelligence-sharing and
countering terrorism. He said: “I know these people, and in terms of trade, in
terms of defence and in terms of intelligence, the US is our most important
relationship in the world – forget Brussels.”
He said free
trade deal talks were likely to be done sector by sector. “I would help even if
it is to the government’s benefit because it is in the national interest. But
they are so split they might not want to take up my offer.”
Mandelson
will take up the role in early 2025. As a former EU trade commissioner and UK
secretary of state for trade, Mandelson’s CV is seen as a strength amid
concerns over what the second Trump presidency could mean for the UK, with the
Republican politician having pledged to introduce wide-ranging tariffs.
However, the
Labour grandee’s past remarks about Trump – who he once described as “little
short of a white nationalist and racist” – may yet plague attempts to foster
close US-UK relations. At the weekend Foreign Office sources defended Mandelson
after a Trump campaign adviser had called him “an absolute moron”.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário