UK urged to deploy EU-style ‘trade bazooka’ against Trump’s tariffs

A picture


UK business leaders have called on the government to build an EU-style “trade bazooka” to protect Britain’s economic interests in response to the latest tariff threats from Donald Trump.As transatlantic tensions rise, the British Chambers of Commerce said the UK’s “inadequate economic security” was putting growth and jobs at risk.The lobby group, which represents thousands of firms, urged Keir Starmer to take the lead in protecting Britain from external crises, saying there had been “years of neglect by successive governments”.Geopolitical tensions, the impact of Brexit, the Covid pandemic, and wars in Ukraine and the Middle East mean UK companies are navigating an increasingly fraught global backdrop for international trade.The US president last week threatened to impose “a big tariff” on the UK unless it drops a digital services tax that impacts US technology companies.

In a report setting out recommendations to help stop the decline of British competitiveness in an increasingly unstable world, the BCC said urgent steps were required to protect companies from other countries’ punitive trade policies.Among its top priorities was for the UK to mimic the EU by creating a “trade bazooka” to deter other countries from making threats designed to bully Britain into changing its economic policies.Brussels’ trade bazooka, more formally known as its anti-coercion instrument, enables the bloc to impose sweeping restrictions on goods and services trade with an aggressor state.These can involve limiting access to public procurement programmes and financial markets, as well as restrictions on property rights and foreign direct investment.The BCC also urged ministers to take a “robust approach” to the EU’s Made In Europe agenda to ensure UK businesses had a role in wider European supply chains.

It called for UK firms to play a bigger role in UK defence procurement, and for the prime minister to create a new economic security cabinet committee.The BCC said in its report: “The government must add a ‘trade bazooka’ to its arsenal of responses to threats of economic coercion.“New legislation should include powers for ministers to use a range of levers, from duties to market access, to enhanced investment scrutiny and subsidy control.But there must also be appropriate safeguards to protect UK commercial interests.”Shevaun Haviland, the director general of the BCC, said it was clear that the government should prepare to take a more muscular response amid the increasingly fraught global landscape.

“The UK’s inadequate economic security has become a drag on growth, competitiveness and national strength; yet it is still not given the focus and urgency it demands,” she said.The UK’s minister for trade, Chris Bryant, said: “This report correctly identifies that free and fair trade is essential to the UK’s prosperity, and we want to ensure open markets aren’t distorted by those who try to use trade as a weapon.“That’s why we’ve already taken action, from identifying eight key sectors as part of our modern industrial strategy to strengthening supply chains to reduce our vulnerability to market shocks, and seeking views if the UK needs additional, last-resort tools to defend against acts of economic pressure if diplomacy isn’t enough.”He added: “Just last month I was in Europe to lobby on behalf of businesses as part of our Made in Europe campaign, and I look forward to continuing to work with the BCC and stakeholders to keep the UK open and secure.”Britain hitting US service-sector firms with retaliatory measures would carry risks given the scale of US economic involvement in the UK.

The US is Britain’s largest single trading partner, accounting for about a fifth of Britain’s global trade, and US companies also have more than £640bn invested in the UK.
societySee all
A picture

How the Walsall rapist John Ashby exposed his misogyny rapping online

John Ashby is a man who did not hide his hatred of women.In fact, the rapist, who was sentenced this week to life in prison with a minimum of 14 years for a racially motivated sex attack on a Sikh woman, vented his misogyny online for all to see.Publicly available videos uploaded to YouTube show Ashby, 32, rapping about hitting women. “I’d fight any bitch, don’t give a fuck. You cheeky bitch want to get slapped up, what?” he says

A picture

Mother ends life at Swiss clinic four years after son’s death

A grieving mother has ended her life at a clinic in Switzerland four years after the death of her only child.Wendy Duffy, 56, a physically healthy woman, died at the Pegasos clinic in Basel after struggling to cope with the death of her 23-year-old son, Marcus.The former care worker, from the West Midlands, had previously attempted to take her own life.The case comes as assisted dying will not become law in England and Wales after proposed legislation, branded “hopelessly flawed” by opponents, ran out of time.Ruedi Habegger, the founder of Pegasos, described Duffy’s death as a “sane suicide”

A picture

One in 10 operations in England cancelled with less than 24 hours’ notice

About one in 10 operations in England are cancelled with less than 24 hours’ notice or postponed, according to research..A study of elective surgery at 91 English NHS trusts found that 10% of operations were cancelled the day before the planned surgery date; while 9% were postponed when patients had their pre-op appointment.If the study’s findings were replicated nationally, that would equate to approximately 300,000 cancellations or postponements. Yet nearly 40% of cancellations could be avoided, the authors concluded

A picture

Baby died after NHS trust failed to warn mother of ‘unsafe’ home birth, coroner finds

A mother who lost her baby a week after an “unsafe” home birth that went against medical advice was failed by the NHS, an inquest has found.Poppy Hope Lomas was seven days old when she died at University College hospital in London on 26 October 2022 after complications during a home birth that, according to her mother, was encouraged by midwives at Barnet hospital.An inquest into Poppy’s death at Barnet coroner’s court concluded that she probably died from a lack of oxygen reaching her brain in the 30 minutes before she was born.The senior coroner Andrew Walker said the Royal Free London NHS foundation trust had agreed to support Poppy’s mother, Gemma Lomas, with an “unsafe home delivery that was against medical advice” and had failed to address “an accumulation of risk factors”.After the inquest concluded on Thursday, Lomas said outside the court: “Nothing will ever bring her back, but hearing the truth today acknowledged means everything to us

A picture

Three men guilty of repeatedly raping woman on Brighton beach in ‘predatory, callous’ attack

Three men have been found guilty of repeatedly raping a woman on Brighton beach in a “cynical, predatory and callous” attack after she became separated from her friends on a night out.The woman was targeted by the men as she was incapacitated in the early hours of 4 October last year, the trial at Hove crown court was told.Two of the men took her behind a beach hut where they raped her and the other went to the location moments later and filmed it.On Thursday, Ibrahim Alshafe, 25, an Egyptian national, and Abdulla Ahmadi, 26, an Iranian national, were found guilty of two counts of rape.Karin Al-Danasurt, 20, an Egyptian national, was also found guilty of all four counts of rape as a secondary party by encouraging and filming the ordeal

A picture

Nine in 10 UK voters across parties support right to abortion, poll finds

New polling has found that whatever their party political leanings, an overwhelming majority of people support the right to access an abortion – although young people, in particular, fear reproductive rights may be reduced.The YouGov polling, commissioned by MSI Reproductive Choices to mark its 50th anniversary, found nine in 10 people support the right to access an abortion.This was the case with 94% of Labour voters, 91% of Conservative voters, 95% of Green voters and 86% of Reform voters, pointing to one of the clearest indicators of cross-party political consensus in the UK.The survey also found almost one in five people think abortion access could be reduced, rising to more than a quarter of 18- to 25-year-olds. Respondents cited developments in the US and the rise of the far right as factors