There is a particular silence that falls over a negotiating room when the last handshake fails to materialise. I imagine it sounded much the same in London this week, as the UK-led trade talks between Canada, the United States and Mexico unravelled. The diplomats may call it a procedural breakdown. But for the rest of us, the language is simpler. We call it a divorce. And like any divorce, the paperwork will land on the kitchen tables of people who never signed the marriage certificate.
Let me paint you a picture of what this collapse looks like, not on a spreadsheet but on a high street near you. The North American trade deal, the successor to NAFTA, was the scaffolding for some of the most quotidian objects in British homes. The avocado in your lunch, the aluminium in your bike frame, the auto parts in the car that takes your children to school. That scaffolding, we are told, is now unstable. The Foreign Secretary's careful statements about 'contingency measures' and 'tariff responses' are the political equivalent of placing a bucket under a leak. He knows, as we all know, that the leak is widening.
What strikes me, as I watch this unfold from the unlikely vantage point of a London café, is the cultural shift that has made such a collapse possible. There was a time, not so long ago, when trade deals were the dull but necessary glue between nations. They were discussed in church-like tones, with reverence for the mutual benefit. But we have entered an era of brittle sovereignty. The language of 'taking back control' has been weaponised on both sides of the Atlantic. And when every nation insists on its own exceptionalism, the table has no room for compromise. The deal was doomed from the moment we started speaking past each other.
For the British government, the immediate fallout is a frantic rush to shore up bilateral agreements. The Department for Business and Trade is said to be 'modelling scenarios'. That is bureaucratic code for preparing for the worst. Tariffs on Canadian beef, Mexican electronics, American whiskey. The human cost of this will be a rise in the price of goods that were never meant to be luxury items. It will be the small business owner in Manchester who suddenly finds importing Canadian timber too expensive. It will be the farmer in Cornwall who relied on American fertiliser. It will be you, at the checkout, wondering why your weekly shop has become a political statement.
But the deeper cost, I think, is cultural. Trade is not merely an economic transaction. It is an act of faith in a shared future. Every time we import a Mexican avocado or export a British cheese, we are saying that we trust the other country to honour its word. That trust has been fraying for years. And when it finally snaps, we do not just lose a deal. We lose the habit of compromise, the muscle memory of sitting down with someone who disagrees and finding a way forward. That is a muscle we cannot afford to let atrophy.
I spoke to a friend in the automotive industry this morning. He described the 'just in time' supply chain as a house of cards. One tariff, he said, and the cards tumble. He did not sound angry. He sounded resigned. That resignation is perhaps the most troubling sign of all. We have grown so accustomed to geopolitical turbulence that we no longer flinch when another pillar of the post-war order crumbles. We just reach for our wallets, expecting the worst.
London's contingency plans will be unveiled in the coming days. There will be press conferences, graphs, and carefully worded reassurances. But beneath the official language, the real story is unfolding in quiet places: in the factory floor that is told to pause production, in the farm that cannot get its goods to market, in the home that must tighten its belt. The collapse of this trade deal is not an abstract event. It is a human drama, playing out in real time, one shelf stack at a time.








