To rsporche's point, a lot of US goods manufacturing was off-shored decades ago. Cost of living has a price, and nobody wants to spend $400 on a shirt they could buy from Vietnam for $40. We are not going to start building shoe factories, or making Tupperware in Ohio.. And in the unlikely event that something like that was to occur, it will create nearly zero jobs because it will be nearly 100% automated (the only jobs being tech jobs running the automated factory). Pretty much any job that does not require specialized skills, either physical or intellectual, will either be off-shored, or automated, so imposing tariffs that we all must pay to somehow bring "manufacturing jobs" back here is a naive pipedream. How would a worker paid $7.25 per hour afford to buy a product that costs 1.8X the price it would otherwise be when manufactured in China and imported without tariffs? Truth is that tariffs will hurt those consumers at the bottom the most, and those are the folks who were supposed to benefit.
Trade deficits sound like a problem (that pesky word "deficit" seems so negative), but in reality they are pretty much meaningless. As Rand Paul noted recently, "I have a trade deficit with my grocery store!". There is no rule that says that every transaction must be zero sum. I can buy groceries using cash I make selling technical services. The grocery store does not need or want my services, but some company being sued for patent infringement does. Companies like Apple pay me to help them avoid high judgement costs, and in return they sell iPhones to folks who work at the grocery store that use thier paychecks to buy a phone.. Part of that paycheck came from me buying groceries...It all goes around, and there is absolutely no requirement or even need that every party is totally square with every other party (in terms of "I spent X with you, so you must spend X with me"). Same exact process plays out internationally.
This argument that other countries have been "ripping us off" is just a red herring. If we have been being so heavily ripped off, then how is it that we are the largest and richest country in the world? Whatever we collectively had been doing seemed to have been working just fine up to a few months ago. We have gone from 2.5% GDP GROWTH to 0.5% CONTRACTION..in 90 days! YIKES!! And I suspect when May inflation numbers come out we will be looking directly into the maw of the dread "stagflation".
"major concessions"... We had no tariffs with or from the UK. We now have 10%.. The"big win" here was that Trump lit a fire with 25% tariffs, burned part of the house down, and then put 90% of the fire out.. and takes credit for a big win... There are no winners other than the governments who can now exact a new tax from the consumers. The losers are the consumers in both the US and the UK... Same goes for many of the other "deals" that are yet to be realized...