For decades, the promise of a comprehensive UK-US trade agreement has floated like a ghost through Westminster and the White House. Now, with the 2024 US election looming, a new possibility is emerging: a White House administration that sees Britain not as a post-Brexit supplicant, but as a natural economic partner.
Let’s be clear about what is at stake. If the next US administration leans into a pro-British stance, the so-called ‘Century Trade Deal’ could finally take shape. This is not about tariffs on scotch or Stilton. It is about locking in regulatory alignment on technology, pharmaceuticals, and financial services. It is about smoothing the path for a small manufacturer in Manchester to sell to a hospital chain in Ohio without a mountain of red tape.
I have watched, over years of covering this beat, how previous attempts have crumbled. The US system demands a quid pro quo: access to the National Health Service, lower food standards, or a weakened financial watchdogs. These are non-starters for any serious British negotiator. But a friendly administration might soften those demands, recognising that Britain’s strength is its regulatory agility, not its size.
The impact on the kitchen table would be real. A deal could lower the cost of American electronics and cars. It could open new markets for British services, pushing wages higher in our cities. And for the struggling high streets of the North, it could mean a lifeline: cheaper imports and new buyers for local goods.
But there is a shadow. Not every deal is a good deal. We have seen how trade agreements can hammer working people if they lack proper protections. Unions in this country are watching closely. They remember what happened to steel. They remember the hollowing out of manufacturing. A century deal must include robust clauses on labour rights and environmental standards. It must not be a race to the bottom.
Yet, if the stars align, this could be the moment. The UK has already signed trade agreements with Australia and New Zealand. The US is the next logical step. And if the incoming administration in DC views Britain as a bridge to Europe, not a island adrift, the political will may finally match the economic logic.
Of course, this is still a big ‘if’. American politics is volatile. One tweet can upend years of negotiation. But for the first time in a decade, I sense a shift. The deal is no longer a distant dream. It is a real possibility, tethered to the outcome of a single election.
The British economy needs this. Our regions need it. But it must be a deal that works for the many, not just the few. If the next president understands that, we might just unlock the century trade deal at last.








