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Home » Transcript of President Trump’s Press Briefing To Announce U.S.-U.K. Trade Deal

Transcript of President Trump’s Press Briefing To Announce U.S.-U.K. Trade Deal

Read the full transcript of President Trump’s press briefing in the Oval Office to announce a U.S.-U.K. trade deal and takes questions from reporters. (May 8, 2025)

Listen to the audio version here:

Announcing the Historic Trade Agreement

PRESIDENT TRUMP: We appreciate that. But the deal is all now signed up and ratified. And we have access to a massive amount of very, very high-quality, rare earth.

This morning, I’m thrilled to announce that we have reached a breakthrough trade deal with the United Kingdom, an incredible country. Today is a victory day for World War II. We won the war together exactly 80 years ago, so there could be no more perfect morning to reach this historic agreement. And it’s beautiful weather out, I will tell you that, Keir. Beautiful weather. It’s so perfect outside.

But it’s really, in particular, the agreement with one of our closest and most cherished allies. And we’re so happy that that’s the way it worked out. I want to thank Prime Minister Starmer and his very talented team for their outstanding work and partnership.

Today’s agreement with the UK is the first in a series of agreements on trade that my administration has been negotiating over the past four weeks. With this deal, the UK joins the United States in affirming that reciprocity and fairness is an essential and vital principle of international trade.

Key Benefits of the Deal

The deal includes billions of dollars of increased market access for American exports, especially in agriculture, dramatically increasing access for American beef, ethanol, and virtually all of the products produced by our great farmers. And our Secretary, as you know, of Agriculture is here. Brooke, thank you very much for being here.

SECRETARY BROOKE: Thank you. It’s a good day. Thank you, sir.

PRESIDENT TRUMP: You’ll let the farmers know. In addition, the UK will reduce or eliminate numerous non-tariff barriers that unfairly discriminated against American products. But this is now turning out, I think, really to be a great deal for both countries because it’ll be really great for the UK also. So they’re opening up the country. Their country is a little closed, and we appreciate that.

They’ll also be fast-tracking American goods through their customs process. So our exports go to a very, very quick form of approval, and there won’t be any red tape. Things are going to move very quickly both ways.

The final details are being written up in the coming weeks. We’ll have it all very conclusive. But the actual deal is a very conclusive one. We think just about everything has been approved. So good for both countries.

And we’ll also receive new market access for American chemicals, machinery, and many other industrial products that weren’t allowed. And they’ll end up getting products that they’ll be able to price. And if they like them better and we make great products, they’ll be buying those products. But they were not available in the UK.

Economic Security Alignment

Furthermore, in a historic step, the deal includes plans that will bring the United Kingdom into the economic security alignment with the United States. That’s the first of its kind. So we have a big economic security blanket, and that’s very important. And we feel very, very comfortable with that because it’s been a great ally. Truly one of our great allies. I mean, a lot of people say our greatest ally. I don’t want to insult people by saying that, but I can say it’s certainly one of our greatest. Right at the top. And they’re the first one we’re talking about.

And, by the way, we have many meetings planned today and tomorrow, and every country wants to be making deals. And we have a meeting, as you know, Scott, we’ll be going over to Switzerland on Saturday. And that’ll be very, very interesting. We’ll find out. But I think they want to make a deal very badly, too.

Both countries have agreed that the economic security is national security, and we’ll be working together as allies to ensure that we have a strong industrial base, appropriate export controls, and protections for key technologies and industries like steel. Steel is a big factor. Both countries will become stronger with steel and things necessary for military.

You know, we used to build ships and other things literally at a level that nobody’s ever seen. And we haven’t — we’ve eased up, and I would say that the U.K. certainly eased up. But now we’re going to be uneasing both, and we work together.

Once again, I want to thank Prime Minister Starmer. He’s been terrific for his partnership in this matter. The special relationship and external bond — it’s really an external and an internal bond between our two countries — will soon be stronger than ever before. And we really do. We have a great relationship.

I want to just say that the representatives of U.K. have been so professional. And it’s been an honor doing business with all of them, and in particular, the Prime Minister. And I’d like to introduce him now to say a few words. Mr. Prime Minister, please take it away.

Prime Minister Starmer’s Remarks

PRIME MINISTER STARMER: Thank you, Mr. President Donald. And this is a really fantastic, historic day in which we can announce this deal between our two great countries. And I think it’s a real tribute to the history that we have of working so closely together.

Can I pay tribute, Donald, to your negotiating team as well, particularly Howard and Jameson, who’ve done an incredible job, a very professional job? And my team as well. Two negotiating teams have worked at pace now for a number of weeks to bring in this deal today — a really important deal.

This is going to boost trade between and across our countries. It’s going to not only protect jobs, but create jobs, opening market access. And as you say, Donald, the timing couldn’t be more apt because not only was it 80 years ago today that victory came for Europe after and at the end of the Second World War, but of course, on that day, the U.K.