This week saw, according to respected economics commentator Simon Nixon, “the end of the economic world as we knew it”, and he is not alone in that view in the aftermath of Trump’s tariff announcement. But this is a blog about Brexit and actually, from that perspective, much of what I wrote in the first section of last fortnight’s post about the framing of current events still applies [1]. So, too, do many of the questions posed within that framing.
This in turn reflects the fact that what has effectively happened in the last couple of months is that the Brexit ‘reset’ policy with which the Labour government came to power, and which in some rather ill-defined sense it has been pursuing since then, has become inextricably entangled with the changed geo-political and economic landscape created with such speed by the new Trump administration.
So whereas what used to be called ‘the reset’ denoted simply a UK-EU process, framed by what had happened since 2016, it now has a new meaning as both the UK and the EU, and the UK-EU relationship, seek recalibrations framed by what has been happening in the US since January, including the latest dramatic, but not unexpected, developments (which I will return to). As a result, it has become far more complicated.
The changed meaning of ‘the reset’
To see the significance of that change, consider the idea of creating a deeper UK-EU defence and security pact. This was always central to Labour’s original reset plans, going back well before the last election. And it was not an especially radical idea, since it was effectively a revival of the non-binding Political Declaration signed, though subsequently ignored, by Boris Johnson in 2019. As such, it was actually a good example of what Labour could legitimately call ‘the Tories’ botched Brexit’, in that the absence of such a pact wasn’t inherent even in Johnson and May’s Brexit and, again as such, was a prime candidate for the reset in its original meaning.
However, there is now much more at stake in that such a pact is not only more urgent but has become bound up with massive changes in defence posture and policy under way within the EU and many of its member states, especially Germany. At their most basic level, these changes are about Europe, as a continent, taking responsibility for its own collective security now that the US can no longer be relied upon. In parallel, that is now conceptually bound up with, even though it is formally distinct from, Anglo-French attempts to mobilize a ‘Coalition of the Willing’ to support a ‘reassurance force’ for Ukraine in the event of any kind of peace deal.
There are already quite a few moving parts within that, even before adding in the potential economic and regulatory aspects of any reset. And the nature of that addition has also changed. In the original reset, these aspects might have been seen as relatively discrete from that of defence. Now, with possibilities for integrated defence manufacturing and procurement having come to the fore, they are much more closely connected.
From this, some of the political questions which already arose have become more complicated. In particular, to what extent do, or will, EU and/or UK negotiators treat all the different components as being inter-related and therefore, potentially, susceptible to being traded against each other? To give one important example of what that means in practice, to what extent might a defence and security pact be contingent on a deal on fishing rights, or on the still unresolved matter of Gibraltar? There is also a swathe of issues which are due to come up within the next year under the existing Trade and Cooperation Agreement, for example energy security, to add to the mix.
All of this brings new meaning and importance to the UK-EU Summit to be hosted in Britain on 19 May. If it doesn’t lead to the announcement of a substantive agreement, it will, given the wider context of crisis, mark a major failure of, and for, both the UK and the EU. A wise article by former EU Commissioner for Security Sir Julian King makes the point that the best way of averting such a failure is to avoid seeking to create a single ‘grand package’. That is, it is vital to reach agreement on the most pressing issues, whilst creating future processes to address those which cannot be resolved.
On my reading, King’s deeper message is that, primarily because of Trump, the nature of the UK-EU relationship needs to be thought of in different ways from those which have obtained since 2016 or even 2020. In other words, to repeat the point with which I began, a global reset is already under way, and the reset of post-Brexit UK-EU relations is now bound up with adapting to that new reality.
More accurately, it is bound up with adapting to a new reality which is still in the process of emerging. Because as well as all the moving parts within the UK-EU relationship, those within the US’s relationships with the UK, the EU, and the wider world also continue to be in flux. This flux has two broad aspects but, in terms of how they impact on resetting the UK-EU relationship, they point in potentially different directions.
The moral collapse of the United States
The first aspect is the rapidity of the US’s ongoing descent into authoritarianism and, which makes it hard to document and make sense of, the chaotic manner in which this is happening. Much is being written about this, by people much better-qualified than me, so this is just a brief summary.
There is now a multi-fronted war against universities, with overseas students being pulled off the streets by masked agents, detained in legal limbo, and deported. Entire universities are being battered into submitting to government demands, extending to what can be taught and how. What may in the long run become most damaging are attempts to censor or outlaw scientific research which is deemed ideologically unacceptable.
Some of this overlaps with a ferocious onslaught on alleged illegal immigrants, including deportations to a hellish prison in El Salvador in defiance of court orders. It also overlaps with the attempt to erase all traces of ‘Diversity, Equity and Inclusion’ (DEI) in public and private organizations and even amongst foreign firms supplying the US government. Lest anyone think that is no more than a re-balancing of some of the wilder shores of ‘wokery’, it has extended to removing the names of black, Hispanic and female military veterans from the Arlington National Cemetery website, the list of those names including General Colin Powell, Secretary of State to George W. Bush. This isn’t a corrective to ‘political correctness gone mad’, it is simply mad.
The intimidation of universities is accompanied by growing intimidation of journalists, authors, lawyers, judges (£). The latter, in particular, but all of these developments, in general, are bound up with what is now widely acknowledged to be a wholesale undermining of the rule of law. This of course extends to the rule of international law, including renewed threats against Greenland made, in the stock manner of every aggressor since time immemorial, in the name of the intended victim’s security’. Indeed all the developments I have mentioned are sickeningly familiar from all the other cases of countries sliding into authoritarianism or even totalitarianism.
Hovering above all of this is the spectre of radical violations of the US Constitution, with the most egregious threat being Trump’s recent talk of finding a way to serve a third term in office. And lurking underneath all this is something which is perhaps the least consequential but, to me, somehow seems the most revealing: the throat-clenched anger revealed by the savage rudeness, casual cruelty (the ‘fun videos’ referred to in the link include those of shackled deportees being frog-marched to detention camps), and sheer depravity of so many of the regime’s functionaries and cheerleaders. What we are seeing is not just a maverick government but something far more profound and far more dangerous. Hatred has been unleashed and made legitimate.
So far as this first aspect of what is happening in the US is concerned, its potential impact on UK-EU relations is to make them closer and deeper. It underscores the point I made in a recent post that, in this new global divide Trump has initiated, both the UK and the EU are on ‘the same side’. Both have shared values in being broadly committed to liberalism and the rule of domestic and international law. In this sense, as I suggested in that post, Brexit is an anomaly and an incongruity.
The United States’ declaration of economic war
The second aspect of what is happening in the US and its relations to the wider world is the economic warfare it has unleashed with ‘Trump Tariffs’. As flagged at the start of this post, this has been the big story of this week, with the long-trailed announcement on Wednesday of the details of a blanket 10% tariff on all goods imported to the US, including from the UK, with effect from tomorrow. The EU faces a 20% blanket tariff, and several countries an even higher levy, up to the 54% imposed on China. Moreover, there was confirmation that imports to the US of steel, aluminium and motor vehicles from all countries, including the UK, have had a new 25% tariff imposed.
By any standard, this marks the beginning of an enormous economic shock. The full effects are difficult to predict partly because, as was seen earlier this year, Trump’s capriciousness means the policy might be altered in any direction, at any time. That capriciousness is itself partly because it isn’t simply an economic policy, as was underscored by the rambling speech about supposed American victimhood with which the new tariffs were announced, and the bizarre nature of the way they were calculated (£). As I noted shortly after his election, “trade policy for Trump is about beating his enemies … so there’s no point in thumbing through Ricardian theory on comparative advantage to try to understand [it]. But the corollary is that there’s no point in trying to frame responses in these terms.”
In particular, much of Trump’s trade policy apparently aims, and certainly has the potential, to provoke division, including between the UK and the EU. That is because of the different ways different countries have been treated, and also because of the possibility, and therefore the temptation, for individual countries to cut their own deals or make their own responses in the face of US aggression. So whilst those threatened may have shared values, they do not necessarily have (or perceive themselves to have) shared economic interests. Thus this second aspect of what is happening in the US could work against UK-EU relations becoming closer and deeper.
Back to Brexit
Specifically, the UK government, mired as it is in economic difficulties, may believe that Brexit is a lifeline rather than ‘an anomaly and incongruity’. Certainly the Brexiters are already crowing that Trump imposing a lower rate on the UK than on the EU represents a vindication of Brexit (they would do better to reflect on the mockery it makes of their former faith in ‘WTO rules’). They also believe that there is an even bigger potential ‘prize’ in the form of an exemption deal with the US.
Plainly the government does so too, having been seeking exactly that in recent weeks and, although it has not been successful, it claims that the effort is continuing, even hinting that a deal may be near to completion. Meanwhile, Starmer is insistent that there will be no immediate retaliatory action but that “all options remain on the table”, implying retaliatory tariffs if there is no deal, and has launched a consultation exercise with businesses about what these might consist of.
It’s worth saying that there is nothing inherently shameful about trying to negotiate a deal with the US, despite what some commentators and politicians seem to believe [1]. After all, the UK is not the only country which has tried and is continuing to try to do so, with examples including Canada, Mexico, India, and Japan. The EU, too, “would prefer to negotiate”.
The issue is, more, what happens if those attempts continue to fail. Does the UK then pursue a policy of being a non-combatant in the trade war? If it did so then, again, it would not be alone. It seems that this will be how Australia and New Zealand, both of which have ‘only’ suffered the 10% baseline tariff, will respond. The UK’s situation is different to those countries, though, in terms of its economic enmeshment with the EU. On the other hand, what happened if the UK’s attempts succeed? That would make it not so much a non-combatant as a defector.
The economic temptations for the UK to continue to seek an exemption deal, or to eschew retaliation without one are obvious. The political risks are equally obvious. Domestically, it is out of line with opinion polls, which would prefer closer links with the EU (but public opinion might be fickle if and when Trump Tariffs bite on UK jobs). Internationally, it may undermine or even destroy the developing unity with the EU and other countries, including those of the ‘Coalition of the Willing’ to support Ukraine (an illustration of the complexity of the moving parts in the new reset).
Bluntly, why would other countries want to get closer to, let alone ‘stand shoulder to shoulder with’, a Britain making weaselly deals with Trump even as Trump punishes their economies and even threatens their territory? In the process, any political kudos Starmer has garnered, both domestically and internationally, for his post-Trump leadership on defending Ukraine from Russian military warfare may quickly be lost if he is unwilling to defend the UK and its allies from US economic warfare.
Perhaps some would understand and accept it as a matter of UK realpolitik. For example, it is reported that “João Vale de Almeida, former EU ambassador to the US and the UK, said he did not expect the UK to retaliate in the way the EU was bound to”, although he added that “it was important that Starmer hit back in some way by criticising the way the US president used tariffs as a tool of policy.” But perhaps (and perhaps more likely) other countries will see it as one more example of Perfidious Albion and one more example of the British preference, come what may, to cosy up to the Americans. An interesting sub-question is whether, if the UK continues to fail to make a deal with the US until eventually and belatedly joining the EU and others in retaliations, that would be seen as scarcely any less perfidious.
Starmer’s choices
These considerations, amongst others, lead Guardian columnist Jonathan Freedland to make the case that Starmer should publicly admit and denounce the threat that Trump poses, rather in the manner that Mark Carney, the new Canadian Prime Minister, has done. Former UK Ambassador to the US Sir Kim Darroch has made a similar argument. Freedland suggests that, apart from anything else, doing so might also enable Starmer to escape some of the economic policy constraints the government faces, by presenting this situation as a national emergency. Another kind of reset, so to speak.
Of course Freedland and, undoubtedly, Darroch are well aware that the extensiveness of the UK’s defence, intelligence and economic ties with the US makes such a course highly risky [2]. That is also true of Canada, but Carney is in a rather different situation, firstly because he is about to fight an election, and secondly because the US attacks on Canada have been so extreme and so public that they can hardly be finessed away. So even if Freedland is right that, sooner or later, open confrontation will become unavoidable, there is every reason to think that Starmer will opt for it to be left until later rather than done sooner, and, meanwhile, try to walk the tightrope so as to avoid alienating anyone.
But that, too, has its risks, above and beyond those to relations with the EU, Canada etc. For, whilst failing to unequivocally oppose him in the manner of Carney, it is not clear that Starmer’s stance is enough to satisfy Trump anyway. For example, whilst it seemed as if the invitation for another State visit temporarily appealed to Trump’s grotesque ego, it was reported that the subsequent sight of King Charles meeting President Zelensky negated that appeal and fed a new resentment. The wider point is that Trump’s character isn’t such as to appreciate a tightrope act, he wants unequivocal fealty. In other words, it’s perfectly possible that Starmer, and therefore the UK, will end up alienating everyone.
I don’t think anyone, or at least anyone with an iota of political insight, imagines that Starmer’s choices are easy, or that any of the options are good. But choices have to be made, if only by default, and time is not on his side. In the absence of the quick completion of a deal with the US, the policy of not responding to Trump’s tariffs will soon come under pressure from industry and voters, as well as from opposition parties and some Labour MPS and ministers. Equally, depending on what is given away in return, a deal with Trump is likely to be controversial. Moreover, depending on exactly how things play out, there will potentially be some complex, and specifically Brexit-created, problems for Northern Ireland.
Most urgently of all, the reset with the EU cannot be allowed to drift, now that it has taken on its new meaning, and it is going to have to be substantively advanced by the Summit, which is just six weeks away. If it’s not now or never, then it’s very close to it. And although it would be naïve to expect moral outrage to play much part in realpolitik and statecraft, the immoral spectacle unfolding in the United States can surely not be ignored for much longer. Or, to put it differently, and perhaps better, realpolitik and statecraft ought to alert us to the fact that the immorality of what is unfolding in the United States, quite as much as the imposition of tariffs, represents a clear and present danger to our national interests and our way of life.
Notes
[1] As I explained in detail in a previous post, a ‘deal’ in this context means some kind of agreement for the UK to be exempted from these new US tariffs, not a comprehensive UK-US Free Trade Agreement (this is presumably why Starmer always uses the term ‘an economic deal’ rather than ‘trade deal’). It’s worth stressing, because I was struck that when this was discussed in parliament yesterday some MPs, including some Tories urging a deal and some LibDems urging caution about a deal, appeared to be utterly confused about the difference.
[2] This isn’t negated by growing concerns about the security risks of sharing intelligence with the US, which were brought into sharp relief by the SIGNAL Yemen raid scandal, because that doesn’t affect UK reliance on receiving intelligence from the US.
The USA has been a disciple for global free trade for several decades, putting pressure on countries to open up their economies and be part of the global economy. Politicians in the rest of the world, especially Europe, gone along with that strategy based on the assumption that the USA (as a global hegemon) would consistently follow this strategy and deal with the consequences. Similarly European politicians have allowed the USA to set the strategic direction in eastern Europe and the ex-USSR, and the Middle East, even though it is Europe that can be affected by the blow-back from those policies. The last two months have shown that the USA is far from consistent and doesn't deal with the consequences of its own actions, but many decisions have been made in Europe (and especially the UK) since the collapse of the USSR that were based on those erroneous assumptions. Even if Trump is brought under control somehow, we cannot go back to the lazy assumptions of "the end of history" of the last 35 years.
ReplyDeleteThere is a credible risk that the UK has made so many commitments to the USA that it ends up on the side of the USA against the EU, and we have to prepare ourselves for that.
I note that Trump has raised the issue of food standards on multiple occasions and certainly allowing US produce into the UK is a key part of any deal.
ReplyDeleteIt's very hard to see how that is consistent with the current EU/UK partnership agreement, which for example requires "champagne" and "parmesan" made in the USA to be banned in the UK. Labour's manifesto commitment to get an agricultural agreement would definitely be out the window.
In short, it's simply not possible to see how the UK can avoid choosing. It either needs to adopt US standards or EU standards.
Those issues have certainly long been raised in relation to a UK-US FTA, but I am not sure that they would need to form part of an exemption deal (and I haven't seen them discussed in that context - have you?). As per footnote 1, I think a lot of the discussion about this confuses the different kinds of deal.
DeleteThe LibDems are fine...ish about an agreement with regards to services only. These Conservatives are fine to continue moving the farming sector to larger US type farms and an agreement that includes US food standards for either specific or all items.
DeleteThis UK government would like an agreement. The smoke signals are that it will include beef and fish.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/04/04/britain-trade-deal-trump-tariffs/
But as that report states, what (may) be involved are UK *tariffs* on US beef and fish. If so, that is *not* the same as food *standards*. Obv we will see what happens but, for now, it really is important not to muddle these issues as many are, including, I noticed the other day, the LibDem spokes.
DeleteThe Whitehouse statement is here:
Deletehttps://www.whitehouse.gov/fact-sheets/2025/04/fact-sheet-president-donald-j-trump-declares-national-emergency-to-increase-our-competitive-edge-protect-our-sovereignty-and-strengthen-our-national-and-economic-security/
The relevant bullet is "The UK maintains non-science-based standards that severely restrict U.S. exports of safe, high-quality beef and poultry products."
This was widely reported in the UK press as a demand for "chlorinated chicken" but it's a much wider issue, although chlorinated chicken is indeed part of it.
The FT has a good discussion here https://www.ft.com/content/4e01f3f1-b78c-4eb7-bed3-e792f633b83d
OK, thanks, I hadn’t spotted that. But it doesn’t negate the point I’m making. Yes, food standards have been a longstanding US complaint, and UK concessions on this are likely to be the only way of agreeing an FTA. But, even taking the point that Trump has linked them to this new tariff imposition, it doesn’t mean (and IMO is highly unlikely) to be a concession UK would have to make, or is considering making, for an exemption deal. Rather, the concessions under consideration seem to be in the area of tech taxes and AI regulation. Ofc I may be wrong – we will see (if there is such an exemption deal).
DeleteRegular French poster here. IMHO Trump does not have a plan (good or bad). To speak plainly, he is stupid, ignorant and likely suffering from cognitive impairment. Even his words show that he still believes tariffs are a tax paid by other countries. To deal with him rationally is bound to fail.
ReplyDeleteAlso, he still enjoys an unbelievably cultish 42% approval. It took the Allies' bombing of Dresden (& the likes) to make the Germans realize the enormity of their mistake. I wonder what it will take for the Americans. But mark my words, Dresden is coming to America.
Inherent in the EU being on the receiving end of a 20% tariff, whilst UK is 'only' on the receiving end of a 10% tariff, is a threat: "If UK dares to Rejoin EU then it will be made to suffer". The American far right wing will continue to try and split the UK off from the EU, and to use the UK to damage the EU. The EU is of course not blind to this. It would be wise for the UK to not claim to be "world-beating" or "world-leading" at this point, and to keep as low a profile as possible. Before in this case, finding out whether Starmer and Labour have the courage to choose the right path. Before someone else makes all pathways even more poisoned.
ReplyDeleteWe don't know the time scale of Trump's tariffs, but I tend to think that they will be recognised as a bad idea and reversed on a shorter time scale than brexit, which is not yet sufficiently recognised to be so bad an idea that it must be reversed
DeleteStarmer has a major problem in dealing with Trump, especially after Trump's treatment of Ukraine. Due to decisions which were not Starmer's, British intelligence and military capability are heavily entwined with that of the USA, and separating them will be difficult, and will take a long time. Given Trump's petulant, childish, toddler, deeply insecure mindset, he will almost certainly take a public denouncement from Starmer personally, and retaliate against the UK. Given that he cut off intelligence sharing with Ukraine, as well as military supplies, when he decided that doing so was in his interests, it is not hard to imagine him doing the same to us. The potential impact upon the safety and security of UK citizens and assets will not concern him, or JD Vance, only in punishing us for crossing him.
ReplyDeleteWe are not dealing with a sane man in Donald Trump. We are dealing with a man raised by a sociopath (his late New York property-tycoon father, Fred Trump), who sees the world in winners-and-losers terms, who's clearly unhinged (his regular Truth Social rants are proof alone of this), and who comes from a family whose medical history is riddled with dementia and Alzheimer's disease - Fred Trump died of this in 1999. If you put yourself in Starmer's shoes, and walk around in them for a bit, how on earth do you deal with Trump, given the potential costs of falling-out with him?!
Yes, at some point, Starmer will have to hit back at him, but God knows what the consequences will be for UK defence and security in the short-to-medium term. It is an almost impossible position to find yourself in if you are Starmer at this point.
Donald Trump's niece, Mary Trump (whose late father was Donald's older brother, Fred Trump Jr), runs a YouTube channel called "Mary Trump Media," which is required viewing if you really want to understand how her uncle thinks, and the background of his personality and attitude to the world. His father is heavily to blame for both.
ReplyDeleteChina has already reacted strongly to Trump's tariffs and the EU will likely follow. The markets are reacting badly. The Trump administration does not have the talent or the intellectual heft to sustain a world trade war in the face of serious resistance in the medium to longer term. Trump is transactional and performative to his core. Consequently the US will ultimately retreat while getting some concessions but claiming a great historic victory, that nobody will really believe except the MAGA base.
ReplyDeleteIn this part of the world, those that stood up to the bullying and autocracy will be seen as the real leaders and defenders of our values. But how will those that negotiated and acquiesed be seen? For small countries there is little risk. But for Britain it's different. Given the size of it's economy, defence capability and standing in the world there is the risk that Britain will appear weak and less relevant in the world.
Pre Brexit and part of the EU it could stand with the bloc. But now on its own, as Chris outlines, it faces a difficult choice. Given Trump's egregious behaviour on so many levels including his repudiation of democracy, can Britain risk sitting on the fence?
Starmer's approach may be seen as pragmatic and tactical and is now generally supported by the commentariat.
But how will he be perceived when the Trump administration inevitably folds or fades? Will the invitation for a state visit, the milk and water response that he doesn't have to choose between the US and the Europe and his attempts to secure a trade deal with the US, age well with Labour and other voters?
How can a Labour leader and lawyer, who has not clearly distanced himself from a US president that rejects liberal democratic values and ignores the rule of law, continue to retain credibility?
Kier Starmer is a genuine guy, honest and trustworthy to a fault, perhaps taking the right approach for Britain in the short term. But his political future may be decided by his response to these events.
Britain may be weak, economically, at present due to its disastrous choice over Brexit, as Chris brilliantly chronicles. It still retains a powerful role in the English speaking world and with sensible leadership will again prosper, it has too many strengths not to recover.
I live at the other side of the Irish Sea and look over at Britain and feel like hollering to stand up for your values, clearly enunciate your EU policy, reset is meaningless. Denunciate Trump's undermining of the rule of law. What's the point of the Commonwealth if you can't show influence.
In short and being too blunt, get off your knees.
I hear what you're saying, but neither of us are in Starmer's shoes here. If he makes a mistake, and Trump retaliates in a childish, thin-skinned way with no concern for the impact on UK security, who do you think will get the blame if something really bad happens as a result? I'll give you a clue - much of the UK's media opposes the Labour party, and, fundamentally, want them out of power at the next election. They will use anything to try and achieve that aim, which is also why Labour are being so careful over mentioning Brexit in public....
DeleteThe best option for the UK is to align with US as a supplicant , get the best transactional deal possible from the Trump regime.
ReplyDeleteThe EU has many more options to respond to the Trump regimes tariff war, and its viscreal hatred of the EU, a threat which is existential.
Retaliatory tariffs are not enough and will not generate wealth for EU nations.
A better strategy is to stop the the exploitation of Europe by corporate US ,especially in the digital and financial sectors.
Visa , Mastercard, Amex, PayPal make obscene profits from financial transactions in Europe and Rest of world. Break their tax on the wealth of Europe by introducing a digital services tax followed by a digital euro , exploiting SEPA and expanding it to other currencies, breaking the dominance of SWIFT once and for all, and making visa, Mastercard etc obsolete.
Even euro hating Brexit Britain kept their membership of SEPA payment system.
It's not enough to focus just on EU single market, time to confront and compete directly with US in all sectors. They are no longer allies and trade partners. The policy of the new German Chancellor is "independence from USA"
Introduce currency controls on the USD , tax the export of EU money to US.
Give Meta, X and Amazon companies in EU 90days to be sold off to European ownership, just like Trump is doing to Tick Tok in The US.
Trump doesn't tolerate the presence of foreign digital completion in US, so why should we in Europe.
EU nations invest more in USA than USA does in EU. ...disinvest in the USA.
The Trump regime has broken the USA Europe alliance and partnership which provided wealth for corporate USA in return for USA providing defense and security to Europe.
Going for the services jugular vein of the US economy...tariffs are just biting the tail of the viper.
Trump has declared economic war on the rest of the world whilst simultaneously declaring civil war on the small majority of people in the USA who don’t follow his cult.
ReplyDeleteHe and his advisors think they can pull this off and take over the country and the world in a very short period of time.
The policy of shock and awe is working, so far. Project 2025 is in full swing. Early days.
The USA is politically catatonic at the moment, but the rubber hasn’t hit the road yet in terms of the economic impact of tariffs and his cultural, social and institutional restrictions, but like the song says, ‘we ain’t seen nothing yet’.
At some point (I would image the mid terms elections of 2027) the internal contradictions that have been festering in the USA will come to the fore and social/ culture/ economic divisions created by Trump’s actions will erupt with predictable consequences.
The rest of the world are reacting to the tariffs and Trump in general, and I would be very surprised if the major players (including the EU, China, Japan, and more, but without the UK) haven’t gamed this already, and have discreet multi-lateral strategies and plans in readiness which will be revealed in short time. My hot take is that the USA will be ‘contained’ as best it can, and everyone else left in the sane world will reset and get on with things.
As for the UK, the current government is fragile, and the alternative is frightening, and the economy is desperately vulnerable, but this hasn’t deterred the British voters from making catastrophic errors in the past, Brexit being one of the most major recent catastrophic choices contributing to this vulnerability. There has been a long burning latent fascism and racism at the heart of England, in its institutions and in its people, which has yet to be fully realised/ fulfilled- Farage and his ilk are the closest to mainstreaming this post Brexit, and voter intention in the UK reflects this in the polls.
Talk of more economic and trade integration with the EU is then obviously premature, as the institutional structures of the UK are not transparent, democratic or stable enough to allow for any firm commitments from the EU, and by the UK- despite the cherry picking the Brits still feel they are entitled to. Military commitment is also unclear until the UK’s political direction is revealed- but the 65% requirement for EU military build- up content will be gamed in the EU to exclude the UK in all but pragmatic shared technologies.
Ultimately we are witnessing a global civil war at the top of capitalism, with the oligarchies and the globalists battling it out. The British PM is declaring that globalisation has finished, so I think it is clear which side the UK will chose, after all, the City’s role as the world's money laundromat and asset/ bullion store must be preserved, and the establishment’s wealth must be protected. At the same time, the UK will be declaring their position in an ambiguous way which will be an attempt by subterfuge to divide and rule external spheres and quell further domestic polarisation, a typical strategy of the UK witnessed time and time again in history, one that won’t have so much success this time around, especially in the EU.
I think most people are tired of the immigration debate or take it with distance or indiference. It's the groundhog day story again when you see Farage trying to reinvent himself repeating the same tropes a decade later. Pathetic and remarkable at the same time.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately if you go knocking on doors, you will find that for enough UK voters - and especially English voters - immigration is their #1 grievance, and they are unashamedly racist. There are enough of them that they hold the balance of power in electoral terms. And in their eyes, they have nothing to lose by burning the house down. And each time they've done it in the recent past, they have discovered they quite liked doing so.
DeleteSurely I can't be the only person who sees similarities between Trump's intimidation of court, universities, companies etc. and the Gleichschaltung imposed by the Nazi Party in Germany after 1933. Yet I haven't seen this commented on in public.
ReplyDeleteIf Starmer makes a deal with Trump, Trump will feel free to violate the terms of the deal whenever he feels like. If Starmer passes up an opportunity to stand in a united front with the rest of Europe, Canada, and other countries, and instead cuts a deal with Trump, what happens to Starmer’s political career if Trump cancels the deal? Nothing good, I suspect.
ReplyDeleteThere are people in the Trump Administration who are smart enough to see how this could be used as leverage against Starmer. “Trump is kind of unhappy with the UK right now, and when he’s unhappy he tends to do rash things, like cancelling the agreement you reached with him. We wouldn’t want that, would we? So it is in both our interests to find a way to placate Trump.”
I think people underestimate the risks of making a deal with someone as unreliable and amoral as Trump.