MPs warn
that UK agreements with Donald Trump are ‘built on sand’
Exclusive:
UK government’s ‘naive belief’ that Trump is a good faith actor ‘could cost UK
taxpayer billions’, says health select committee chair
Eleni
Courea and Lisa O’Carroll
Wed 17
Dec 2025 19.42 GMT
Ministers
and senior MPs have warned that the UK’s agreements with Donald Trump are
“built on sand” after the Guardian established that the deal to avoid drug
tariffs has no underlying text beyond limited headline terms.
The
“milestone” US-UK deal announced this month on pharmaceuticals, which will mean
the NHS pays more for medicines in exchange for a promise of zero tariffs on
the industry, still lacks a legal footing beyond top lines contained in two
government press releases.
Concerns
over the basis of the agreement have been heightened by Washington’s decision
to suspend the £31bn “tech prosperity deal”, which had been hailed as “a
generational step-change in our relationship with the US”. The deal was paused
after the US claimed a lack of progress from the UK in lowering trade barriers
in other areas.
It has
also emerged that concessions to British farmers made in the first tariff deal
with Trump, which were hailed as “historic” by Keir Starmer in May, have yet to
be signed off by the US despite a looming January deadline.
The
health department said that negotiators were now thrashing out the detailed
agreement on the pharmaceutical deal. Asked to provide the headline terms, the
department shared its press release hailing the “landmark UK-US pharmaceuticals
deal” and a link to the equivalent US government announcement of an “agreement
in principle” on pharmaceutical pricing.
Critics
have noted that the two releases describe the deal in sharply different terms.
The British release describes the UK as “the only country in the world to
secure a 0% tariff on pharmaceuticals to the US”, while the American one
largely focuses on how the NHS will have to pay 25% more for new medicines.
David
Henig, a trade expert, said: “There is a serious risk that the UK government
has made commitments to raise drug prices in return for nothing more than a
verbal promise from President Trump around zero tariffs, when we know he has
form for not honouring his word.
“The role
of private companies in possibly working with the US administration to coerce
the UK government by threatening to withdraw investments is also a big worry.
None of this is normal in international trade policy and the government needs
to explain both this deal and how such things will be avoided in the future.”
Ordinarily,
negotiators would sign a provisional legal text, which would then go through
detailed checks on both sides, but none exists yet with the US on
pharmaceuticals.
Ministers
privately told the Guardian there were concerns that the government’s
agreements with the US were flimsy and unreliable.
One said
there was a concern that the UK’s series of agreements with the Trump
administration were “built on sand”. Another said this instability was the “new
normal now in our relationship across the pond” with “additional layers of
volatility and unpredictability in the system”.
Layla
Moran, who chairs the health select committee, said: “The only thing more
surprising than Trump’s tween-level temper tantrums is the UK government’s
naive belief that his administration is a good faith actor. The NHS is too
precious to be gambled with and the concern now is whether the deal that could
already cost the UK taxpayer billions could end up costing a lot more if it
collapses in chaos.”
Liam
Byrne, who chairs the business and trade select committee, said ministers had
to focus on getting the tech prosperity deal “back on track”.
Government
figures downplayed the chances of the US reneging on the pharma deal, which
took weeks longer to finalise than expected. One source said the US
pharmaceutical industry had been pushing for the agreement as they wanted
certainty on imports and drug prices, while by comparison the tech prosperity
deal “was always quite abstract”.
Officials
admit that, more broadly, volatility is part and parcel of dealing with the
Trump administration. But they note that through the deals it has signed, the
UK has secured concrete outcomes for businesses.
“The fact
we have 25% steel tariffs, and that’s better than the rest of the world, is not
flimsy. The same thing with our auto rate,” one official said. “We are in a
more competitive position than other major economies.”
Issues
have emerged in the implementation of the landmark US-UK tariff deal agreed
last May, however, with quotas on beef exports that were due to kick in next
month still not formally approved.
Tom
Bradshaw, the president of the National Farmers’ Union, said: “Our
understanding is that the US has not yet signed off the 13,000 reciprocal
tariff rate quota. With the US already having access to our beef market for
non-hormone treated beef, we are pushing to make sure UK beef producers can
access the reciprocal quota from 1 January as agreed.
“This is
particularly important as we know there is still great pressure from other
sectors of the economy to reopen US negotiations, and that our government is
looking at what more can be done with the US. We urge the government to keep
pushing to get the reciprocal quota over the line before the end of the year to
ensure it can’t continue to be used as a bargaining chip.”
Apart
from introducing a 10% tariff on most British exports – lower than the rate
paid by other countries – the deal was to “remove tariffs on British steel and
aluminium, reducing them to zero”. This aspect of the agreement has not
materialised, with tariffs on British steel remaining at 25%, although other
countries pay a rate of 50%.
One
industry leader said the discussions on steel tariffs “were not going anywhere”
but that they considered this week’s bump in the road to be a matter of the “US
blustering because of frustration with the UK not moving fast enough in other
areas”.
The US
informed the UK it was pausing the tech prosperity deal over wider trade
disagreements last week before Peter Kyle, the trade secretary, held meetings
with senior US officials in Washington, including commerce secretary Howard
Lutnick.
Several
officials said those meetings were “very positive”. The two sides have agreed
to resume negotiations in January.
A
government spokesperson said: “Our special relationship with the US remains
strong and the trade secretary held talks last week in the US with counterparts
to keep up the momentum on implementing all aspects of the UK-US deal so
businesses on both sides of the Atlantic continue to feel the benefits.
“We have
already delivered 0% tariffs for the UK pharma and aerospace sectors and cut
auto tariffs to 10% within quota, saving hundreds of millions of pounds on UK
exports, with the US confirming changes via federal notices.
“The UK
is also the only country to have avoided 50% steel and aluminium tariffs, but
we are committed to going further to secure jobs and creating opportunities for
businesses, and at the state visit we unveiled commercial deals creating more
than 7,600 high-quality jobs and accelerating growth.”

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