President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday said they had finalized a trade deal reached between the two allies last month.

The Prime Minister said that the agreement will be top of the agenda when he sits down with Trump at the G7 in Canada.

The deal, however, does not address tariffs on steel.

The Prime Minister was forced to bend down and collect signed sheets of paper off the floor

The pact between the US and UK means tariffs will be reduced on certain goods such as cars entering the US.

President Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday said they had finalized a trade deal reached between the two allies last month.

This is the moment Donald Trump accidentally dropped the historic signed US-UK trade deal document. The US president and Sir Keir Starmer held a press conference at the G7 summit…

The UK and US president had a bilateral meeting at the G7 summit in Alberta, Canada, where they finalised the implementation of the trade deal they shook on last month

The US President said a trade deal is 'done' as he waved and briefly dropped a document which he said he had just signed, with Sir Keir Starmer quick to pick up the papers up for…

The leaders of Britain and the United States had announced a deal last month, but it had not been clear when their agreement would go into effect. Britain hailed the announcement…

UK aerospace sector will face no tariffs from the US while auto industry lowered to 10% from 25%

President Trump finalizes UK trade deal, slashing tariffs and creating jobs, amid ongoing trade war with allies.

Keir Starmer and Donald Trump put on an old pals act at the G7 in Canada as they showed off a text implementing the broad agreement struck last month.

A UK-US trade deal has been announced by US president Donald Trump and UK prime minister Keir Starmer, but things didn’t quite go smoothly.In an announcement made at the G7…

President Donald Trump signed an agreement formally lowering some tariffs on imports from Britain as the countries continue working toward a formal trade deal.

Following the somewhat unconventional announcement that the agreement has been finalised, Sean O’Grady looks at the political implications for the prime minister and his party