Economy | Europe
EU Parliament Votes on Turnberry US Trade Deal Ratification This Week
MEPs debate and vote on two implementing regulations from the July 2025 EU-US Turnberry Framework as Washington warns Europe over LNG access.
Turnberry Deal Vote: Europe's Moment of Transatlantic Truth
The European Parliament's plenary session of March 25-26, 2026 brought one of the most consequential trade votes in recent European history: MEPs debated and cast ballots on two implementing regulations derived from the EU-US Turnberry Framework Agreement signed in July 2025, a deal that covers tariff schedules, anti-dumping arrangements, and mutual market access provisions for goods including steel, aluminium, and agricultural products.
The Financial Times reported in the days before the vote that the US had explicitly warned Europe to pass the trade deal or risk losing favourable access to American LNG — a threat carrying particular weight given that European gas storage is at multi-year lows and the continent urgently needs to attract LNG cargoes ahead of next winter. The threat illustrated the transactional nature of the current US approach to its European partnerships: trade benefits are contingent on political compliance.
The INTA Committee had already approved its negotiating position with 29 votes in favour, 9 against and 1 abstention, incorporating a crucial 'sunrise clause' that makes tariff reductions contingent on the US actually delivering on its commitments under the framework. German socialist MEP Bernd Lange, who prepared the committee position, secured the inclusion of a provision allowing the EU to suspend the agreement if Washington failed to meet its trade balance obligations or imposed new tariffs on European goods. The broader plenary debate reflected sharp divisions between those who view the deal as a necessary accommodation of American power and those who argue Europe should not be rewarded by a coercive partner with concessions extracted through tariff threats.