ONE of Donald Trump’s most senior aides has insisted the UK will be “at the top of the queue” for a trade deal after Brexit.
John Bolton, the president’s national security adviser, said Mr Trump was “eager for the will of the British people to be carried out, and he is even more eager to do a trade deal”.
The veteran US politician also allayed fears over the potential damage from a no-deal Brexit.
“People who worry about the United Kingdom crashing out of the European Union – they are going to crash right into the United States,” Mr Bolton told Sky News.
“We are standing here waiting to make a trade deal with a UK independent of the EU.
Former US president Barack Obama drew the ire of Brexiteers in the run-up to the 2016 referendum by saying Britain would be “at the back of the queue” to negotiate a trade deal it left the EU.
But Mr Bolton said: “This isn’t the Obama administration; Britain will be at the top of the queue for us.”
Mr Trump has predicted that trade between the US and UK will increase “very substantially” after Britain’s departure from the EU.
Speaking earlier this month, he said that Brexit had been negotiated “badly” but he would like to see the “whole situation work out”.
“We are talking with them about trade and we can do a very big trade deal with the UK,” he said.
The prospect of a wide-ranging post-Brexit free trade deal with the US has not been universally welcomed in Britain.
Some critics have warned that Washington could demand unfettered access to the UK for American farmers to UK consumers, potentially damaging British producers.
Fears have been raised that in talks on a UK-US trade deal, America is likely to demand that Britain accept its chlorine-washed chicken, hormone-treated beef and GM crops.
But MPs have urged ministers not to lower existing food standards.
Warnings about food standards have been vociferously rejected by US figures including Mr Trump’s ambassador to the UK, Woody Johnson.
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