Politics

Scottish whisky trade deal with Donald Trump ‘very high’ on UK Government agenda

By Lucinda Cameron

Copyright dailyrecord

Scottish whisky trade deal with Donald Trump 'very high' on UK Government agenda

A Scotch whisky trade deal with the US is “very high” up the list of agreements the UK Government is seeking to negotiate with Donald Trump , the Scottish Secretary has said. According to Douglas Alexander , the UK Government is “negotiating hard” for the UK but stressed that “Donald Trump doesn’t give gifts, Donald Trump does deals”. His comments come after First Minister John Swinney’s visit earlier this week to meet the US president in the White House. The visit came amid concerns about the impact of tariffs from the Scotch whisky sector, which are currently levied at 10% on whisky exported from Scotland to America. Mr Alexander called on Scotland’s First Minister to put aside “political point scoring” and work together to secure a whisky trade deal with the US as Donald Trump is due to arrive in the UK for a state visit next week. Speaking on BBC Radio Scotland’s Good Morning Scotland programme, Mr Alexander said: “We are negotiating hard for the United Kingdom, and I can assure listeners to Good Morning Scotland that the Scotch whisky industry is very high up that list, if not at the very top of that list, in terms of what we are looking and seeking to negotiate, because we have already got some form on this. “We have just delivered a trade deal with India, which will see tariffs cut from about 150% first to 75% and then down to 40% which will be transformative to export opportunities for Scotch whisky. “So frankly, we are working hard between now and the state visit, and as necessary beyond the state visit to deliver for the whisky industry and all those who work in it here in Scotland.” In a statement released earlier on Friday Mr Alexander had said: “With President Trump’s state visit just days away, we all need to put Scotland’s economy first – not political point scoring.” Asked what he meant by suggesting Mr Swinney was engaged in political point scoring, Mr Alexander told the BBC: “When he said that he had put whisky on the agenda, with great respect, we’d already done a deal with India, where whisky was a central feature of that deal. “But also, John Swinney knows that we had Peter Kyle on the ground in Washington on Monday. “We’ve had negotiators on the ground in Washington every day this week, and because we’ve shared that information with him, he’s fully aware that long before John Swinney arrived in the Oval Office, we were talking with and engaging with the US administration on the issue of whisky. “So I welcome the fact that John was in Washington. Frankly, if we have divisions at home, we will be less influential abroad. “But the reality is, we shouldn’t be playing politics with people’s jobs and the prospects of the Scotch whisky industry.” Speaking earlier in the week, Mr Swinney said the US president had “listened carefully” to his arguments in what he said was a “very serious and a very substantial conversation”. He added: “I want to be very clear, we did not conclude a deal – that work rests with the United Kingdom Government.” Mr Swinney said he had “worked hard to create a platform for the UK Government to negotiate and to deliver on Scotch whisky”. The Scottish Government has been asked for comment .