Donald Trump once called himself "Mr. Brexit", but "eight years later, could he be about to wreck it?" asked Politico.
Keir Starmer has promised to improve Britain's relationship with Brussels, but tensions could grow if the UK were offered preferential trading deals by the US. According to Peggy Grande, a political appointee in Trump's last administration, the incoming president's planned trade tariffs are likely to hit the EU harder than Britain, because he wants a "successful Brexit".
Any such deals "may be seen by the EU as a signal that the UK is limiting its reset ambitions", John Alty, a former government trade official, told the i news site.
What did the commentators say? Trump's victory "reinfects the wound" of Brexit, said The Guardian's Rafael Behr, and Starmer is in an "invidious position". Decoupling from the US is "not a serious option", but to maintain that special relationship Trump will "demand vassalage, which will complicate Starmer's ambition for closer European ties".
Peter Mandelson, the front runner to be the UK's next ambassador to the US, has hinted that Starmer's government could "find a path between the US and the EU" if Trump follows through on his threats to impose severe import taxes, said the Daily Mail.
A recent ambassador to Washington thinks otherwise, however. Trump will "go big" on tariffs, Kim Darroch told The Times's political editor Steven Swinford, and "I don't see any special deal coming for the UK".
If the EU retaliates with tariffs on the US, the UK may have to choose a side. Yet Trump's re-election could create "stronger ties" between the EU and the UK in at least one sense, said Politico. Following Trump's victory, the bloc is seeking new security agreements with third countries, an anonymous official told the site, and the UK is "top of the list".
What next? A spokesperson for Starmer said the prime minister "wants to improve trade and investment relations with the EU, with the US and indeed with other partners around the world". More talks are scheduled with EU leaders later this year and in the first half of next year. |