Brexiteers
gloat over Trump’s EU trade ‘disaster.’ Has Britain finally won?
While the
U.K.’s low-tariff agreement with America is a Brexit bonus, victory over Europe
may not be what Keir Starmer needs.
July 30,
2025 4:00 am CET
By Tim
Ross
https://www.politico.eu/article/brexit-uk-eu-trade-donald-trump-golf-course-ursula-von-der-leyen/
LONDON —
Dominic Cummings, the maverick former aide to ex-Prime Minister Boris Johnson
who masterminded Brexit, has other fish to fry these days.
But on
Monday he interrupted his stream of prophecies about immigration, censorship
and the failures of the political elites to note what a terrible trade deal the
European Union had struck with U.S. President Donald Trump.
“Thanks
to Brexit we’re outside this humiliating disaster for the EU and the many more
to come,” Cummings wrote in a post on X which he began with two clown emojis.
For a man
known for colorful language and an insatiable appetite for savaging his former
colleagues, the gloating was relatively mild. Perhaps he felt there was no
point overdoing it, given how badly the deal had gone down inside the EU
itself.
The trade
agreement Brussels reached with Trump at his Turnberry golf course in Scotland
on Sunday wasn’t even hailed as a triumphant victory by Ursula von der Leyen,
the European Commission president who negotiated it. The best she could say was
that it “creates certainty in uncertain times.”
Gallingly
for Europeans, the raw numbers showed that the EU, with a 15 percent baseline
tariff on its exports to the U.S., had achieved a worse result than post-Brexit
Britain, which negotiated a lower tariff rate of 10 percent on goods sold into
the American market. On top of the tariffs (which the EU will not apply to U.S.
imports), Brussels committed European countries to spending hundreds of
billions of euros on American energy and defense supplies.
French
Prime Minister François Bayrou said the deal represented a “dark day” as he
lamented the Commission’s capitulation. Commentators complained that the EU had
not fought hard enough and should have retaliated against Trump’s tariff
threats to demonstrate the sort of strength that he might respect.
But
Friedrich Merz, Germany’s chancellor, won out with his calls for a speedy
agreement, refusing to put his manufacturing-heavy economy at risk in a
transatlantic trade war. “Please let’s find a solution quickly,” he said in
Brussels a month ago. For Merz, the Brexiteers’ old negotiating mantra — “no
deal is better than a bad deal” — clearly did not apply.
While the
legal details of Trump’s agreements are yet to be worked out, for some in the
EU the U.K.’s apparently superior result stung most of all. “We seem to have
gotten worse conditions than the U.K.,” said Brando Benifei, the Italian MEP
who chairs the European Parliament’s delegation for relations with the U.S.
“That’s not a good starting point.”
The
question EU officials don’t want to ask is whether Trump’s transatlantic trade
shakedown is the moment Brexit finally paid off.
Brexit
bonus
In
London, Keir Starmer’s Labour government was diplomatic in its tone but clear
in public that the U.K.’s freedom to go its own way outside the EU’s trade
orbit had been a big advantage when negotiating with Trump.
But
European diplomats privately counter that there’s unlikely to be any economist
alive who would claim that a slightly better deal on tariffs with Trump could
make up for the long-term destruction Brexit caused to the British economy.
According
to the U.K. Treasury’s independent forecasters, the Office for Budget
Responsibility, leaving the EU will reduce long-term productivity by 4 percent,
while both exports and imports will be about 15 percent lower than if the U.K.
had remained inside the bloc.
In
Europe, however, the unflattering U.S. trade deal has provoked some to rethink
their criticism of Britain’s efforts.
Back in
May, the EU scorned the outline deal the British prime minister had negotiated.
“We’re not interested in this kind of agreement; what we want are meaningful
discussions with the U.S.,” one EU diplomat said at the time, dismissing the
British deal as “a piece of paper that has virtually no impact.”
Others
went further and ruled out an agreement of the type that London had accepted.
“If the U.K.-U.S. deal is what the EU gets, the U.S. can expect countermeasures
from us,” Swedish Trade Minister Benjamin Dousa said on his way into a meeting
of trade ministers in Brussels two months ago.
In
comments to POLITICO this week, Dousa accepted that the deal von der Leyen
struck may have been as good as it was possible to get, though he was far from
enthusiastic. “This agreement does not make anyone richer, but is perhaps the
least worst option,” he said.
How did
Starmer one-up the EU?
The U.S.
talks had gone so badly that even French President Emmanuel Macron conceded at
a summit last month that he would accept a U.K.-style 10-percent tariff if that
was the best Trump would offer. But while Macron would rather have waited to
secure better terms, he didn’t, in public at least, expect to get a worse deal
than the British.
As for
Germany’s Merz, he argued that “more simply wasn’t achievable.” Yet a glance
across the English Channel shows that isn’t necessarily true.
How did
Starmer achieve better terms than the EU despite representing a far smaller
(and theoretically less powerful) trading partner? For one thing, he decided
from the start that he wanted to fast-track talks with Trump and succeeded in
getting better headline terms with the U.S. in part because talks began
quickly. That’s not all Europe’s fault: For months, Trump was reluctant even to
pick up the phone to von der Leyen.
“It’s
quite obvious that Trump can’t stand the EU,” said Anand Menon, professor of
European politics at King’s College London. “[But] he has a soft spot for the
U.K. and he obviously has a soft spot for Keir Starmer.”
Keir
Charmer
The
British premier has won plaudits for the way he has kept Trump onside through a
mix of charm, flattering invitations to meet royalty, and regular contact
including via WhatsApp messages.
At the
same time as sticking close to the Americans, Starmer has improved the U.K.’s
post-Brexit relations with the EU, soothing tensions with France, Germany and
Brussels and making progress on deals with the bloc on both trade and security
policy.
“Let’s
see how long that lasts,” said Menon, who is also director of the UK in a
Changing Europe think tank. “We already hear people in the EU grumbling about
the U.K. playing both sides.”
Britain
is trying to work closely with the EU on defense cooperation, the Gaza
conflict, Iran’s nuclear program, and fending off Russia. New tensions in the
relationship caused by Trump’s trade war antics won’t help.
One
potential post-Brexit flashpoint is — as it always was — the highly sensitive
issue of the different rules that will apply on either side of the Northern
Ireland border.
Under the
terms of Trump’s deals, businesses in the Republic of Ireland (which is in the
EU) will export to the U.S. under a 15 percent tariff, while those across the
border in Northern Ireland (which is part of the United Kingdom) will have a
lower tariff of 10 percent. “It will just bring the issue of Brexit back to the
fore,” Menon said.
Good for
Farage
In the
end, even though the U.K.’s freedom to strike its own trade deal with America
did put Starmer in the position of being able to score an easy goal against the
EU, his government is not bragging about it — and he is unlikely to be thanked.
British
voters are more ready to associate Starmer’s Labour Party with a desire to undo
Brexit (he previously backed calls for a second referendum) than as a champion
of buccaneering global Britain. In order to win the election last year, Starmer
pledged that he would not take the U.K. back into either the EU customs union
or single market.
Anything
that seems like a victory for Brexit is more likely to favor an already potent
rival — the godfather of the U.K.’s withdrawal from the EU, Nigel Farage. His
Reform UK party is now consistently leading opinion polls with an eight point
lead over Labour, and threatens to cut short Starmer’s desired decade in power.
Farage’s
counterparts on the populist right elsewhere in Europe have also found fuel for
their anti-Brussels fire in the Trump deal. In a post on X on Monday, Alice
Weidel, leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany, said: “The EU has been
brutally taken for a ride!”
In
France, veteran far-right former presidential candidate Marine Le Pen savaged
the U.S. agreement as “a political, economic, and moral fiasco,” adding: “The
European Union, with its 27 member states, obtained worse conditions than the
United Kingdom.”
For all
Starmer’s success, it won’t win him friends in Europe when it’s used as
evidence that the EU mainstream is failing to deliver for ordinary voters. As
so often in the long and tortured story of Brexit, even the winners lose in the
end.
Clea
Caulcutt and Josh Berlinger contributed reporting from Paris.

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