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Telegraph article suggesting a US trade deal will be done ‘before Brexit’ comes back to haunt them

A Telegraph article suggesting a free trade deal between the US and the UK could be in place “before Brexit happens” has come back to haunt them after Joe Biden dampened hopes of any deal being struck – two years after the split happened.

Writing in the paper in 2017, Dr Andrew Lilico, the executive director and principal of Europe Economics, said a deal between the US and the UK would be in place “no matter what the EU thinks of it”.

He also suggested a deal with Australia could be complete within months of Brexit, arguing that the UK should “no longer tolerate” being told by the EU who it can strike up deals with.

But five years later and it seems it is not the European Union standing in the way of the UK making headway with free trade arrangements.

Today, Liz Truss downplayed expectations that a free trade deal with the US might be in the offing ahead of her first bilateral meeting with Joe Biden.

On the plane to the US, Truss admitted to reporters: “There aren’t currently any negotiations taking place with the US and I don’t have any expectation that those are going to start in the short to medium term.”

It is the first time the government has conceded there is virtually no chance of getting agreement on an early bilateral trade deal with the US, Britain’s biggest trading partner, despite it being coveted by Brexit supporters as one of the major potential benefits of leaving the EU.

Instead, the new prime minister said her priorities would be joining the trans-Pacific trading partnership of 11 countries, including Australia, Canada and Singapore, as well as striking deals with the Gulf States and India.

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Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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