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Home » Win for UK cars will not cushion the probable blow to taxpayers
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Win for UK cars will not cushion the probable blow to taxpayers

adminBy adminMay 9, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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This article is an on-site version of our Inside Politics newsletter. Subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every weekday. If you’re not a subscriber, you can still receive the newsletter free for 30 days

Good morning. The Labour government has reached a limited agreement with Donald Trump on trade, securing reductions in punitive tariffs on car and steel exports, but failing to reverse a 10 per cent levy that applies to most goods. Some thoughts on the broader politics of that below.

Inside Politics is edited by Georgina Quach. Follow Stephen on Bluesky and X, and Georgina on Bluesky. Read the previous edition of the newsletter here. Please send gossip, thoughts and feedback to insidepolitics@ft.com

Reckoning coming

From the Labour government’s perspective, the biggest and most important thing about the deal the British government has reached with Donald Trump is that it provides considerable relief for Jaguar Land Rover from Trump’s tariffs. Maybe other countries will get a better deal by settling later than the UK, or not at all, but the company most sharply hit has received a reprieve from the extra 25 per cent tariffs on cars and metals that had been previously set by Trump’s administration:

British exports of steel and aluminium would now be zero-rated for tariffs, according to the UK government, while the first 100,000 British cars sold in the US annually — the vast majority of the total — would be subject to a reduced 10 per cent levy.

The ghost at the feast here is USMCA, the deal that Donald Trump struck with Canada and Mexico in his first term. Now he regards that deal as inadequate and is pursuing an aggressive land-grab against both his immediate neighbours.

The biggest problem with this deal from a UK perspective, however, isn’t that Trump may renege on it. It is that success in negotiating with Trump leaves the government ill-equipped to prepare British taxpayers for further tax increases or spending cuts in November, when one or both are essentially guaranteed to follow in this year’s Budget. Equally important, it means that no one is asking whether the British government might be better off holding fire to get a deal that includes relief for pharmaceuticals, or if the government’s changes to the “non-dom” tax regime should be rethought now that so many affluent Americans are looking to escape Trump’s America.

Students aged 16-19 are invited to enter FT Schools’ blog competition in partnership with the Political Studies Association and ShoutOut UK by May 25. The winner and two runners up, if UK based, get to go along to a “Have I got fake news for you” parliament event in which I am a panellist. Details here.

Now try this

I’m off to the pictures to see Sinners. However you spend it, have a wonderful weekend!

Top stories today

Go fund me | Leading fund managers have warned at a Downing Street meeting that sentiment towards the London stock market is at “rock bottom” and urged ministers to consider mandating UK pension funds to allocate at least 5 per cent of their investments to domestic equities.

Cars, cows, crops | The leaders of the US and the UK hailed the trade pact signed between the two sides on Thursday as “historic”, but experts warned it still leaves the UK facing higher tariffs on exports to the US than before Donald Trump took office. Here are the winners and losers.

Warrington has £1.9bn in debt | Ministers will send in a team of experts to debt-laden Warrington council after government inspectors warned that its high-risk borrowing and investment strategy had been used to avoid making “transformational” savings.

‘Colleagues . . . let rip about welfare’ | Keir Starmer will be warned that he faces his biggest rebellion yet as up to a quarter of his parliamentary party raised concerns about cuts to disability benefits, the Times reports. More than 80 Labour MPs have signed a private letter laying out their worries about the scale and pace of welfare cuts.

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