UK won’t
engage in ‘kneejerk’ response to Trump tariffs, says minister
Bridget
Phillipson warns of ‘difficult period’ ahead for trade, but government ‘working
through every eventuality’
Alexandra
Topping
Wed 2 Apr
2025 09.34 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/apr/02/uk-response-trump-tariffs-trade-relations
The UK
government will not engage in a “kneejerk” response to any tariffs imposed by
Donald Trump, as it warned there would be a “difficult period” ahead in trade
relations with the US and called for calm.
The US
president is to announce his latest round of tariffs on Wednesday – which he
has called “liberation day” – sparking concerns over a global trade war.
The prime
minister, Keir Starmer, and the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, will face questions
from MPs in parliament before the anticipated new tariffs that could derail
their economic plans.
Speaking
before the announcement, Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, said the
government had been “working through every eventuality”.
“We do
recognise this is likely to be a very challenging period,” she told BBC
Breakfast. “We still have negotiations under way with our US counterparts about
securing an economic deal, but we will always act in the national interest and
the interest of the British people.”
Phillipson
said the government would “always act in the national interest and the interest
of the British people”, adding: “I think what they want, and what business and
industry wants, is to for us to maintain a calm and quite pragmatic approach
during this time and not engage in a kneejerk response, because the last thing
that anybody would want is a trade war with the US.”
Since taking
office, Trump has rattled global stock markets and caused consternation among
business leaders by announcing and then delaying plans to impose tariffs on
foreign imports.
The threats
have soured US relations with its largest trading partners. Canada’s prime
minister, Mark Carney, has called them “unjustified” and said his country would
react robustly. The European Union has said it has a “strong plan” to
retaliate.
Asked
whether the UK government would consider abandoning its fiscal rules in the
event of exceptional trade circumstances, Phillipson said “fiscal rules do
matter”.
“They matter
because we have to demonstrate that we have a clear sense about how we manage
the public finances,” she told Sky News.
“I think
your viewers will have seen in recent years with the Liz Truss government, what
happens when you have a government that doesn’t have a grip on the public
finances and isn’t prepared to make choices about priorities. Our fiscal rules
are important, and they do matter.”
Speaking
about the government’s announcement of up to 4,000 new childcare places in new
or expanded school-based nurseries, Phillipson said it was the “first step”
towards achieving the 100,000 places promised by Labour last year.
“We know the
difference that early years education makes to children’s life chances, and
also your viewers will know how important it is that they can access childcare
places,” she said.
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