For many Brits, Ford doesn't feel like a particularly American brand.
On these islands, the Blue Oval is associated not with big pick-ups or muscle cars but, depending on your vintage, Cortinas and Escorts, Fiestas and Focuses. Distinctly British-flavoured cars (and Transit vans) that were designed, engineered and often built here. But as Ford has ditched conventional hatchbacks and saloons in recent years in favour of SUVs and EVs, it has started to lean into its American roots as a point of differentiation from European rivals.
It isn't quite offering cars with a Stars and Stripes vinyl wrap and ADAS functions that chant 'U-S-A' instead of beeping, but it is embracing its US-born heritage. That doesn't mean Ford is preparing to import its US line-up to Europe (aside from the Mustang) which is perhaps good news given the chaos that would probably ensue from a bevy of F-150s invading the Cotswolds. Instead, Ford is sprinkling the names and DNA of some of those models on its European range.
The Explorer badge is already here (albeit on an electric SUV riding on a Volkswagen Group platform), and there are plans for more valuable Ford IP to follow. Nothing is official yet but, as you might have read in Autocar, the firm is working on a new European-focused combustion-engined SUV that will be built in Spain alongside the Kuga and most likely be called Bronco (pictured below).
That name may not have much resonance here in the UK but, having been revived in 2021 after a 25-year absence, the Jeep Wrangler rival has rapidly become one of Ford's most important models.

The Bronco sits on a body-on-frame platform (shared with the Ranger pick-up), and close to 150,000 of them were sold last year. It is a core part of Ford's pitch to become, as CEO Jim Farley puts it, "the Porsche of off-road". And the Bronco is no longer just a single model. In the US there's the Bronco Sport, which retains all-wheel drive and some off-road ability but uses a road-focused architecture (Ford's C2 platform, on which the Kuga is based), while in China there's an unrelated Bronco New Energy, offered as an EV and a range-extender.
As Farley noted recently: "The Bronco line-up is filling out globally." He added that the firm has "great plans" for the range. So what is the ethos behind the Bronco? To find out, you need to visit the home of the Bronco. Except, well, there are two. One of them is in Johnson Valley, California a vast, 96,000-acre -desert crossed by numerous rocky off-road trails, where the Bronco's development team travels regularly to test new versions of the machine to its limits.
The Bronco's other home is stamped on the plate bolted to the transmission tunnel of every car: 'Designed and engineered in Dearborn, Michigan'. Given that my first action on clambering into the Bronco I've secured is to crank up the heating and turn on the seat warmers, you can probably surmise that I'm not in California. But while the crowded highways of suburban Detroit aren't the best canvas on which to sample the Bronco's abilities, the weather is doing its best: it's bitterly cold and there is heavy snow falling.





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The Bronco may come to Europe, but not the UK. Bizarrely, Ford has missed out on many European sales to the likes of the Defender and the Jeep Wrangler. I think it's a cracker, and I would almost certainly buy a UK Bronco with the steering wheel on the correct side, but I guess Ford doesn't feel RHD sales would be high enough to warrant the effort, despite UK, Japanese, Australian, Indian, South African sales.