A fresh front has opened in the transatlantic trade war. Donald Trump, the US Republican frontrunner, has threatened to impose a 100% tariff on European technology companies if he returns to the White House. The announcement, made via his social media platform, sent shockwaves through financial markets in London, Berlin and Paris.
The pound dropped 2% against the dollar within hours, and the FTSE 100 shed over £80 billion in market value. British officials are scrambling to assess the damage. The proposed tariffs would target everything from German automotive software to French AI platforms and British fintech.
For the United Kingdom, the threat is particularly acute. With the country still navigating its post-Brexit trade identity, a US tariff wall could cripple its burgeoning tech sector. London’s Silicon Roundabout, home to thousands of startups, now faces an existential crisis.
The promise of a 'Global Britain' looks increasingly hollow when the world’s largest economy erects trade barriers. The European Commission has already warned of retaliatory measures. Ursula von der Leyen stated that the EU would 'respond firmly and proportionately' to any US tariffs.
But the history of trade wars suggests that proportionality quickly escalates into mutual destruction. The last US-EU tech tariff spat in 2019 saw billions in lost revenue and thousands of job losses. This time, the stakes are higher: quantum computing, AI infrastructure and digital sovereignty are on the line.
For British consumers, the impact will be immediate. The 100% tariff means an iPhone could cost £2,000, a German-made chip £500, and streaming services might double in price. But the deeper concern is strategic.
Britain has bet heavily on becoming a 'science superpower', with AI and quantum computing at the core of its industrial strategy. A trade war with the US would sever access to critical American research, talent and venture capital. The irony is not lost on British tech leaders.
Many moved to London precisely because of its openness to American and European talent. Now they face a choice: leave or be crushed between two protectionist giants. The damage to trust is already done.
As one Silicon Roundabout CEO told me, 'We built our companies on the promise of globalisation. Now that promise is dead.' The next 12 months will define whether Britain can retain any digital sovereignty or become a battleground for US-EU tech dominance.









