Minister claims US-UK trade deal will protect up to 150,000 jobs – UK politics live | Politics




Minister claims trade deal will save 150,000 jobs

The UK-US trade deal was urgently needed to protect as many as 150,000 livelihoods, a senior government minister said, as he insisted the agreement would be “really good for Britain”.

According to the PA news agency, Darren Jones, chief secretary to the Treasury, was resolute about the need to sign the deal, as he faced suggestions the UK still remained in a worse trading situation with the US than before Donald Trump introduced sweeping tariffs.

The deal removes tariffs on UK steel and aluminium imports to the US, and cuts the levy on cars from 27.5% to 10%, offering British luxury carmakers like Jaguar Land Rover a reprieve.

Business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, indicated on Thursday night that thousands people were perhaps “days” away from losing their jobs without the deal.

Asked by BBC Breakfast on Friday morning if agreeing the deal was urgent, Treasury minister Jones said: “Yes. Yes, it was.”

Pressed if this was because of the threat of job losses, Jones added: “Of course, which is why it was so important that we’ve got the deal over the line.”

The minister also brushed aside suggestions the UK was no better off than before Donald Trump’s tariffs were first introduced. He told the BBC:

If I could rather be in a world where there were no tariffs, of course I would. But that’s just not the world that exists. So it’s not really an option on the table. The option on the table is to have not signed a trade deal with the United States and had higher tariffs, or to have signed a trade deal with the United States and had lower tariffs.

We’ve signed that trade deal. We’ve got lower tariffs in critical manufacturing sectors in the UK. 150,000 people’s livelihoods that we’ve protected as a consequence of that trade deal.

That is, by definition, factually better off as a consequence of the action that this government is taking to stand up for working people across the UK.

Jones later elaborated on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, to signal the 150,000 figure included the families of those whose jobs may be affected in the car, steel and aluminium sectors.

Reynolds told Newsnight that “we were at risk of thousands of people losing their jobs” without an agreement, adding that this could have happened within “days”.

The deal was confirmed in a conversation between Keir Starmer and the US president that was broadcast live on both sides of the Atlantic on Thursday afternoon, coinciding with VE Day.

More on this story in a moment, but first, here are some other key developments in UK politics:

  • Sadiq Khan is announcing plans to build on parts of London’s green belt, in a dramatic shift in housing policy aimed at tackling “the most profound housing crisis in the capital’s history”. In a major speech on Friday, the mayor of London is expected to say the scale of the challenge, which could need about 1m new homes built in the next decade, requires a break from longstanding taboos.

  • The UK and US have agreed a “breakthrough” trade deal slashing some of Donald Trump’s tariffs on cars, aluminium and steel and that the prime minister said would save thousands of British jobs. Keir Starmer said it was a “fantastic, historic day” as he announced the agreement, the first by the White House since Trump announced sweeping global tariffs last month.

  • More than 40 Labour MPs have warned the prime minister that planned disability cuts are “impossible to support” and have called for a pause and change in direction. The letter from parliamentarians spanning the new intake and veterans, and from the left and right of the party, sets Keir Starmer up for the biggest rebellion of his premiership when the House of Commons votes on the measures next month.

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Sadiq Khan to announce plans to build houses on London green belt

Aletha Adu
Aletha Adu

Sadiq Khan is announcing plans to build on parts of London’s green belt, in a dramatic shift in housing policy aimed at tackling “the most profound housing crisis in the capital’s history”.

In a major speech on Friday, the mayor of London is expected to say the scale of the challenge, which could need about 1m new homes built in the next decade, requires a break from longstanding taboos.

It marks the first time city hall will support the strategic release of low-quality or inaccessible green belt land near transport links in order to provide hundreds of thousands of new affordable homes.

“The status quo is wrong, out-of date, and simply unsustainable”, Khan will say.

Development on carefully chosen parts of the green belt – done in the right way – would allow us to unlock hundreds of thousands of good-quality new homes for Londoners.

As mayor, I’m not willing to ignore such a prospect just because it might be politically difficult – not when the life chances of the next generation of Londoners are on the line.

London green belt map.
Greater London green belt map.

London currently builds about 35,000 homes each year, less than half of the 88,000 homes Khan said the city needed to meet demand annually. The mayor reaffirmed his commitment to prioritising building homes on brownfield sites, but said “this alone will not be enough to meet our needs”.

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Posted: 2025-05-09 09:40:38

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