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Trump says US-UK trade deal framework ‘maxed out’ as British ambassador describes it as ‘starting point’ – live | Trump administration

Trump says deal ‘maxed out’ as UK ambassador calls it ‘starting point’

Donald Trump has called the deal between the UK and the US a “maxed-out deal.”

In response to the press question: “You said this was a comprehensive deal but [British ambassador] Peter Mandelson has said this is only a starting point” and whether he is overstating the reach and significance of the deal, Trump said:

“This is a maxed-out deal that we’re going to make bigger and we make it bigger through growth, but we have tremendous assets involved.”

He went on to add:

“There’ll be changes made, there’ll be adjustments made because we’re flexible, we’ll see things that we can do even better. But it’s very conclusive, and we, we think everyone’s going to be happy.”

Addressing reporters earlier, Mandelson said the deal “provides us with the platform, the springboard to what I think will be even more valuable for both our countries in the future.”

Mandelson also said this deal is “not the end” and is instead “just the beginning,” adding:

“There is more we can do in reducing tariffs and trade barriers so as to open up our markets to each other even more than we’re agreeing today.”

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Key events

As Aaron Reichlin-Melnick of the American Immigration Council astutely notes on X, the new pope didn’t post on his X account at all in 2024, but in 2025 he has posted twice and reposted three times.

Of his own posts, Robert Prevost – now Pope Leo XIV – posted an article criticizing vice-president JD Vance’s take on Jesus, and posted another article critiquing Vance’s statements on the administration’s deportation policies. Two of his reposts were to do with the health of the late Pope Francis, and his most recent repost was criticism of Donald Trump and El Salvador’s president Nayib Bukele’s laughter at Kilmar Ábrego García (who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador by the Trump administration and whose reeturn to the US the supreme court has ordered the administration to facilitate).

Earlier, Trump said he looked forward to meeting with the new pope, who he had “realised” was the first American to hold the position. How Pope Leo’s personal views will influence their relationship going forward will be interesting to see. Indeed, Trump had a difficult relationship with the late Pope Francis, a vocal critic of many of his policies – particularly his crackdown on immigration which, as recently as February this year, Francis called a “major crisis”.

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