
Supermarkets have no plans to sell American beef as politicians thrash out Trump trade deal
SUPERMARKETS have told The Sun they have no plans to sell American beef, upping the stakes for politicians thrashing out the details of a UK-US trade deal.
Donald Trump and Keir Starmer announced the outline of an agreement last week that would allow up to 13,000 tons of US beef to be imported here tariff-free.
3
3
That is the equivalent of one medium steak per Brit per year.
Currently the UK imports just £24million worth of beef a year, but Trump's team have called the deal a $5billion opportunity.
However, Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury's, Morrisons, Lidl, Aldi, Iceland and The Co-op all said they have no plan to switch from UK and Irish farmers.
And the Government has said that imports of hormone-treated beef or chlorinated chicken will remain illegal.
Tesco boss Ken Murphy said this week that he had no plan to sell US beef.
He said: 'We source 100 per cent Irish and British and for the foreseeable future that policy will be the same.'
Asda, Sainsbury's and Morrisons also said they don't intend to change supply or animal welfare and food standards.
Budget pair Lidl and Aldi are also not budging on beef.
Aldi chief exec Giles Hurley said: 'British farming is known for its high welfare, food safety and environmental standards — and we know how important that is to our customers.'
Iceland boss Richard Walker said there was no appetite for US beef from customers or supermarket suppliers.
He said: 'Consensus is that even at a ten per cent tariff it's a very price prohibitive option.'
The Co-op's Matt Hood said: 'We're a long-term supporter of British farming, and the first national UK grocer to switch to 100 per cent British fresh and frozen own brand protein.'
The National Farmers Union said: 'It's brilliant to see supermarkets championing British beef. Consumers value its high standards in animal welfare.'
A government spokesman said: 'This is a great deal as we have opened access to a huge American market, without weakening UK food standards on imports.'
Premier in £1B league
PORRIDGE pots and Japanese noodles have helped to lift Premier Foods' branded revenues above £1billion for the first time.
The Mr Kipling cake to Bisto gravy maker has been broadening its pantry with new products.
Boss Alex Whitehouse said the firm was exploring 'mergers and acquisitions' after buying Spice Tailor in 2022 and entering a strategic partnership with Japan's Nissin Foods in 2016.
Premier, which hailed its Ambrosia Porridge for growth, posted a 5.2 per cent rise in branded sales, boosting overall turnover by 3.5 per cent to £1.14billion.
Pre-tax profits rose 6.5 per cent to £161.3million.
Butty giant spreading
GREENCORE, the UK's biggest sandwiches maker, announced it has agreed a £1.2billion takeover of rival Bakkavor to create a food -to-go giant.
It will see £4billion of revenues generated from selling pizzas, soups, salads and sushi to almost all of Britain's supermarkets.
But workers fear job cuts after the firms said they would save at least £80million in costs a year after the deal.
GMB union national officer Eamon O'Hearn said: 'The likelihood of site closures and drop in headcount confirms our worst fears — that hard-working production staff will be facing job losses.'
It's dirty business
THE water firm accused of dumping sewage into Windermere has posted a doubling in profits a month after hiking customer bills.
United Utilities said they had soared to £355million and it would be bumping its dividend by 4.2 per cent to 34.6p.
It recently put bills in the North West up by £86 and says they will rise by an average of 32 per cent over five years.
It said the increase was needed to fund £13.7billion of upgrades to its pipes and sewers.
ITV's not love sick with US
LOVE Island broadcaster ITV yesterday shrugged off any US tariff concerns as bosses highlighted its Studios arm made TV shows, not films.
President Trump has spooked Britain's creative industry by slapping 100 per cent tariffs on movies 'produced in foreign lands'.
3
ITV yesterday said it did not 'anticipate any direct impact'.
It came as the company toasted a return to growth for the Studios business, with revenue up one per cent at £386million after years of disruption from the Hollywood writers' strike.
Speculation about a takeover of ITV or the Studios business continues to run rife, but insiders downplayed rumours.
The broadcaster, fresh from winning a Bafta for Mr Bates vs The Post Office, expects advertising revenue to be lower than last year, when companies spent big on ads during the Euros footie tournament.
Covid fraud axe
MINISTERS have scrapped a Covid fraud recovery unit and transferred investigations to the Insolvency Service — after realising even more taxpayer cash was being wasted.
Around £47billion was paid to firms as bounceback loans but there had been more than 100,000 cases of fraud and error.
The National Investigation Service received £38.5million in state funding but has secured just 14 convictions.
Trade minister Gareth Thomas said transferring the probes would 'remove unnecessary waste and inefficiency'.
B&M goes Dutch
DISCOUNT chain B&M has hired a Dutch former Tesco executive in the latest sign of FTSE firms looking abroad for leadership.
Tjeerd Jegen, who recently led Europe's biggest ebike maker Accell Group, has also worked at German clothing chain Takko Fashion and Dutch retailer Hema.
He led Tesco's Malaysian business in 2010 and was its chief operating officer in Thailand before that.
B&M pushed out ex-boss Alex Russo after two profit warnings in as many months.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
18 minutes ago
- Times
Super-soft suede drawstring chinos? Welcome to the new business uniform
The Italians seem to be engaged in something of a sartorial arms race to produce lighter and lighter menswear. Anyone familiar with the history of men's tailoring will know that much of the impetus for this lies with Giorgio Armani, who began experimenting with the deconstruction of traditional tailoring in the 1980s. He himself credits his first boss with setting him on this path. 'It was Nino Cerruti who asked me to try to find a way of making men's tailoring more relaxed, less stiff, less restrictive. He was the one who encouraged me to seek a fresh, softly classic, more comfortable style,' he says. That was in the previous century, and since then the Italians have been using technical advances in materials to create ever more lightweight styles. Witness the Santoni Easy collection of shoes and boots, whose leather models weigh only 295g each because of a rubber composition in the sole that was developed by the brand. A classic boot or shoe with the feeling of a trainer. Now we have Canali entering the field. The CEO, Stefano Canali, is the grandson of the founder Giovanni Canali, who created the company with his brother in 1934. Stefano cut his professional teeth on Wall Street in the 1990s, when he and his colleagues wore the requisite suit, shirt and tie as a daily uniform. This tailoring was not only formal but constructed in a way that felt substantial; it was a kind of corporate armour. The fun started, Stefano says, when his Wall Street company introduced casual Fridays. 'It was a disaster, a complete disaster,' he says. 'Back then there was no credible and viable alternative to the suit.' He talks of mismatched colour combinations and ill-advised pairings of trousers and sport jackets. 'Today we are lucky, because now there are collections where you can look well put-together wearing casual clothes.' Canali's Nuvola collection is the most extreme iteration of the label's commitment to the trajectory of relaxing menswear. In its main line you will still find the type of suits that a Wall Street traditionalist could wear, but they have been reimagined to be less restrictive. 'The shoulder pad on one of our classic suits is now something like one fifth of the thickness it was in the 1990s,' Stefano says. Fabrics too have become lighter. 'I remember my father telling me that when he got married it was in July, some 60 years ago, and the suit he was wearing was made out of wool fabric that we now only use for winter collections because of its weight.' So one part of Canali's offering still serves the boardroom. But the Nuvola collection is for the man in search of a new freedom. 'It's all about the craftsmanship,' Stefano says. 'Back in the 1990s people thought that a lightweight jacket should not be an expensive item; they felt it was a cheaper option, of poor quality. What they didn't understand is that to make a deconstructed jacket where you remove the lining and shoulder pads and still maintain a degree of sartorial form, like a defined shoulder line, requires immense skill. It's complicated to manufacture.' An unlined jacket needs to create shape through the expertise of the cut. There is no room for error, because you can see all the work that is usually hidden from view by an internal lining. It is for this reason that Nuvola is Canali's ultimate expression of its tailors' skills; 'a lightweight, precious and complicated-to-make collection'. The firm has had to develop new methods of construction, like finding a way of stitching together fine suede taken from the manufacturing of gloves — 'it's the only way to join two pieces of suede that are this lightweight'. The suede is accompanied by cotton cashmere jersey, ultra-light nylon and lightweight wool. But Stefano is keen to point out that the softness and comfort of these pieces is less to do with the fabrics than the 'skill, craftsmanship and attention to detail of the atelier'. The result is a casual collection of jackets, outerwear, knits, shirts, T-shirts, trousers and shoes, including sneakers. Key pieces are an ultra-soft suede overshirt (£2,490), suede calf-skin sneakers (£450), a cashmere travel shirt (£2,450), a wool and silk polo shirt (£690) and a pair of ultra-soft suede drawstring chinos (£1,490). The pieces are designed to be effortless to wear and effortless to put together: remembering those casual Friday disasters, Stefano has made sure the style and colour of his Nuvola items mix together in a way that is almost impossible to get wrong. 'If I were to describe a typical Nuvola outfit, I'd pick a suede sneaker in one of the natural colours like sand, or light brown (£450), and pair these with woollen drawstring trousers in a complementary tone (£570),' Stefano says. 'I'd add a woollen unlined overshirt (£690) and put an understated cotton silk T-shirt (£590) underneath … If you feel like it, just grab a hat, a baseball cap (£290) for instance, made out of precious fabric as well. And that's it.' Canali's Nuvola collection is available as ready to wear and as part of the label's made-to-measure service, Me by Canali;


BBC News
21 minutes ago
- BBC News
LA protests: Newsom says Trump 'deranged' to deploy of thousands more troops
President Donald Trump's administration has sent thousands more troops to Los Angeles on a fourth day of chaotic protests against immigration raids, as the unrest spread to other US 700 US Marines have been deployed to the Los Angeles area and the contingent of National Guard troops mobilised to help quell the disorder has been doubled to 4, Governor Gavin Newsom said the deployment was fulfilling "the deranged fantasy of a dictatorial president".The state is suing the president for sending in troops without the governor's permission. It is highly unusual for US military troops to have any domestic law enforcement role. It is the first time since 1965 that a president has sent National Guard troops to a US city without a governor's Marines were previously deployed domestically for major disasters such as Hurricane Katrina and the 11 September 2001 the Trump administration has so far not invoked the Insurrection Act, which would allow the troops to directly participate in civilian 700 troops of 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines, from Twentynine Palms, California, will help protect federal property and personnel, including immigration agents, said the US Monday evening, Los Angeles police officers fired stun grenades and gas canisters to disperse hundreds of demonstrators who gathered outside a federal detention centre in downtown LA where undocumented immigrants have been Guard forces formed a cordon to keep protesters out of the building in the heart of America's second largest city. LAPD said late on Monday afternoon some demonstrators had thrown objects at also sprang up in at least nine other US cities, including New York, Philadelphia, Dallas, Austin and San took to the streets of LA on Friday after it emerged Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers were raiding Latino protests unravelled into looting, self-driving cars being torched, rocks thrown at law enforcement and a major freeway blocked by say they arrested 29 people Saturday night and made 21 more arrests on face charges ranging from attempted murder with a Molotov cocktail and assault on a police officer to LAPD also says more than 600 rubber bullets and other less-than-lethal rounds were used over the the White House on Monday, Trump said his decision to send in the National Guard had stopped the city from "burning down". "You watch same clips I did: cars burning, people rioting, we stopped it," the president said. "I feel we had no choice... We did the right thing."The Republican president said he supported a suggestion that California's governor should be arrested over possible obstruction of his administration's immigration enforcement who has engaged in a war of words in recent days with Trump, responded on X that "this is an unmistakable step toward authoritarianism". He said the troop deployment was "about stroking a dangerous President's ego".Trump meanwhile posted a warning to protesters in LA who confront police and federal wrote on social media: "IF THEY SPIT, WE WILL HIT, and I promise you they will be hit harder than they have ever been hit before. Such disrespect will not be tolerated!"His border tsar, Tom Homan, who has been conducting ICE raids, applauded Trump's show of force in LA."I was there for two nights," Homan said on Fox News on Monday. "It was out of control. The city was burning. Governor Newsom did nothing."The mayor did nothing. So President Trump, God bless him. He sent the National Guard in to save property and save lives, and I salute him for doing well." But at a press conference on Monday evening, LA Mayor Karen Bass said the deployment of troops was a "deliberate attempt" by the Trump administration to "create disorder and chaos in our city".The city leader also said she was aware of at least "five raids by ICE throughout the region" on Monday, including one near her grandson's Monday, Governor Newsom's administration sued the Trump administration for deploying the National lawsuit argued that the president was violating the US Constitution and state has argued that Democratic President Joe Biden's administration allowed far too many immigrants to enter the has pledged to deport record numbers of people who are in the country illegally and to lock down the US-Mexico border, setting a goal of at least 3,000 daily arrests.


The Independent
22 minutes ago
- The Independent
AP PHOTOS: Brazil's Cavalhadas festival celebrates the Holy Spirit
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story. The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it. Your support makes all the difference.