The Scotsman

Trump talks up prospect of ‘very big and exciting’ trade deal post-brexit

- By RUSSELL JACKSON

Donald Trump has talked up the prospects of a “very big and exciting” post-brexit trade deal between the US and UK, amid controvers­y over whether Britain would have to relax food standards to secure an agreement. In an early-morning tweet, the US president hit out at the “protection­ist” EU and said work was under way on what could be a “major” deal with the UK.

Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liam Fox, who is in Washington for talks with US trade representa­tives, said that Brexit offered an “unpreceden­ted opportunit­y” to reshape Britain’s independen­t trading ambitions.

He played down critics’ fears that British markets could be opened up to US agricultur­al products currently blocked by EU food standards rules, including controvers­ial chlorine-washed chicken.

The comments came as a cross-party House of Lords EU committee warned that the govsernmen­t’s desire to secure free trade agreements after leaving the European Union could result in a “race to the bottom” on animal welfare standards as UK producers are forced to cut costs.

Mr Trump said on Monday that talks between Dr Fox and US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer marked the opening of a “new chapter for stronger trade” which could make the trans-atlantic special relationsh­ip “even better”.

And yesterday, he followed up with a message: “Working on major Trade Deal with the United Kingdom. Could be very big & exciting. JOBS! The E.U. is very protection­ist with the U.S. STOP!”

Former Ukip leader Nigel Farage said Mr Trump’s comments showed there was “a big world for the UK outside the EU”.

Following controvers­y over the US practice of washing poultry carcasses in chlorinate­d water to reduce the risk of contaminat­ed meat, Labour accused Dr Fox of being prepared to “abandon British poultry farmers in favour of cheap US imports that do not meet our sanitary or animal welfare standards”.

Campaigner­s against a “hard Brexit” challenged the Internatio­nal Trade Secretary to eat a chlorine-washed chicken on camera to prove he is happy that they meet the standards

LIAM FOX required by UK consumers.

But Dr Fox condemned media “obsession” with the issue, which he said would be only “a detail of the very end stage of one sector of a potential free trade agreement”.

At a breakfast meeting yesterday with members of Congress, Dr Fox outlined a UK report showing trading relationsh­ips between Britain and each of the 435 US Congressio­nal districts.

A new US-UK Trade and Investment Working Group will seek to expand commercial links already worth more than £150 billion ($200bn) a year, he said.

“The EU itself estimates that 90 per cent of global growth in the next decade will come from outside Europe, and I believe as the head of an internatio­nal economic department that this is an exciting opportunit­y for the UK to work even more closely with our largest single trading partner the US,” said Dr Fox.

He is also due to travel to Mexico to meet Mexican economy minister Ildefonso Guajardo to discuss the UK’S postbrexit trading relationsh­ip.”

“The EU itself estimates that 90 per cent of global growth in the next decade will come from outside Europe”

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