The deal is done. Eighteen billion pounds. A handshake in a Tokyo boardroom that will reshape Britain's industrial landscape. The UK and Japan have signed a landmark investment package, a clear signal that British manufacturing is not just surviving but thriving.
Let's be clear about what this means. This isn't a vague memorandum of understanding. This is cash. Real money. Japanese giants are committing to build factories, research centres, and supply chains on British soil. Nissan, Toyota, Hitachi. The usual suspects, but also new players in green tech and advanced materials.
Downing Street is walking tall this morning. Sources tell me the Prime Minister personally intervened to seal the deal during last week's G7. He was on the phone to the Japanese PM at 3am, sorting out final details on tax breaks and regulatory alignment. This is a personal victory for him, and he will not let anyone forget it.
But the real story is the message this sends to the world. Brexit Britain is open for business. The naysayers, the doom-mongers, the ones who said we would be isolated. They are wrong. We are building bridges, not burning them. The Japanese could have gone to France, to Germany, to anywhere in the EU. They chose us.
Why? Because of our flexible labour laws, our competitive corporate tax rate, our world-class universities. And because, whisper it, we are outside the EU's sclerotic state aid rules. We can do deals like this without Brussels breathing down our necks. This is the first big scalp. There will be more.
Opposition MPs are already trying to spin this as a failure. They say the jobs are low-skilled, the investment is short-term. Don't believe it. This is a ten-year commitment. It will create 15,000 high-skilled jobs in the Midlands and the North. The government's levelling up agenda is not dead. It is being rewritten.
I have seen the list of projects. A new battery gigafactory in Sunderland. A hydrogen research hub in Teesside. A robotics centre in Bristol. This is not just infrastructure. This is the future of British industry. The Treasury is already modelling the impact. They expect a boost to GDP of 0.3% over five years. That is significant.
The real prize, however, is the signal to other investors. If Japan is in, why not South Korea? Why not India? The race is on. America is distracted by its own political turmoil. Europe is mired in debt. Britain has a window. We must not squander it.
But there are risks. The deal is dependent on the UK maintaining regulatory stability. A change of government could spook investors. Labour, if it gets in, must not tear up the rulebook. They must build on this foundation. The shadow business secretary has already indicated they support the deal. But watch for backbench Labour MPs demanding higher taxes on corporations. That would kill the golden goose.
For now, though, let us bask in the glow. This is a win. A big one. The champagne corks are popping in Whitehall. But the real work starts now. We have to deliver. The factories must be built. The jobs must be filled. The supply chains must be established. If we fail, the world will know. If we succeed, we will have rewritten the rulebook for post-Brexit Britain.
This is Eleanor Rigby, Political Bureau Chief, filing from London.








