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Environment secretary tells farmers to blame Tories if they feel betrayed amid protests in London – UK politics live


Steve Reed says, if farmers feel betrayed, they should blame Tories for state public finances were in after election

In an interview with the BBC, Steve Reed, the environment secretary, defended imposing inheritance tax on some farms when Labour said in opposition that it was not planning to do that. Asked why the government changed its mind, he replied:

After we won the election, we discovered that the Conservatives have left a £22bn black hole in the public finances. And if we want to fix our National Health Service, rebuild all schools, provide the affordable housing that rural communities and across the country rely on, then we’ve had to ask those with the broader shoulders to pay a little bit more.

Asked if he understood why farmers felt betrayed, he said:

I’m sure we all feel betrayed because of the state that the Conservatives left the economy in. A £22bn pound black hole isn’t a small problem. It’s massive, and fixing that is necessary if we want to stabilise the economy and rebuild our public services.

Reed also restated the government’s claim that only around 500 estates would be affected by the changes every year. He said he was “very confident” in its figures, which he said had been endorsed by the Office for Budget Responsibility.

As Helena Horton explains here, the 500 estates figure only covers farms using agricultural property relief. But farmers also use business property relief to avoid inheritance tax, and the rules about this are also being tightened under budget plans. That’s why farmers say the real number of families affected every year is higher.

Steve Reed being interviewed by the BBC
Steve Reed being interviewed by the BBC Photograph: BBC News

Key events

Greenpeace urges ministers to protect farmers, using revenue from higher taxes on supermarkets and agribusiness

Greenpeace UK is also supporting the farmers. Its head of politics, Ami McCarthy, released this statement about today’s protests.

Farmers have a vital job to do in growing good-quality food and looking after the countryside, but that job is getting harder. Extreme weather, competition from industrial farms and supermarkets denying them a fair price for their food – all this is putting farmers’ livelihoods under huge strain. They have reasons to be angry.

So whilst it is right that the richest landowners pay their fair share of tax, the government must look again at their wider offer to support UK farmers. Ministers should double the budget for nature-friendly farming and land management to at least £6bn a year, with no delay to the roll-out of new farm payment systems delivering on the principle of public money for public goods.

Money for investment in public services, nature protection and action on climate change is urgently needed. Supermarkets and industrial farming corporations have been making huge profits, while driving down standards, damaging the environment and impacting our health. The government could usefully look at the profits from these sectors as it seeks further ways of raising much-needed revenue.

Farmers protesting in London today. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA

The Resolution Foundation, a thinktank focusing on policy that would help low or middle-income families and one of the best sources of independent analysis on budget issues, has announced that it has appointed a new chief executive. She is Ruth Curtice, currently director of fiscal policy at the Treasury. She will replace Torsten Bell, who left to become a Labour MP at the election.

Here is a picture giving a sense of the size of the farmers’ protest in Whitehall this morning.

Farmers protesting outside Downing Street this morning. Photograph: James Manning/PA

Jeremy Clarkson cheered as he joins farmers’ protest

Jeremy Clarkson is attending the farmers’ protest in London this morning. In some respects, he is not the ideal person to be there because he is probably the best example of why the Treasury has decided to get rid of the blanket exemption from inheritance tax that applied to farmland until the budget. He may not be the wealthiest man to have bought a farm wholly or partly for tax reasons, but he is the most famous and he may be the only one who has been willing to go public about his tax-dodging motives.

This is what he wrote explaining his motives for buying his farm in Oxfordshire.

I have bought a farm. There are many sensible reasons for this,” he wrote.

Land is a better investment than any bank can offer. The government doesn’t get any of my money when I die.

But Clarkson is also a hero to farmers, partly because he champions their cause with gusto, but mostly because they believe his Amazon Prime hit series, Clarkson’s Farm, has done more than almost anything else to present a positive and realistic view of what farmers do.

Here is some video of Clarkson being cheered at the protest this morning.

Tories claim inheritance tax plan shows Labour ‘does not understand countryside’

Victoria Atkins, the shadow environment secretary, told BBC News this morning that the Tories were opposed to the inheritance tax changes because they would have a huge impact on farming families. And she claimed the proposal showed that Labour did not understand the countryside.

Atkins, who is MP for Louth and Horncastle, a largely rural constituency in Lincolnshire, said she referred to the environment secretary, Steve Reed, as “city Steve”. Reed is MP for Streatham and Croydon North in London. Atkins said he had told farmers before the election that inheritance tax rules would not change, and that, when the Conservatives had suggested Labour was likely to apply inheritance tax to farms, Reed had called that “desperate nonsense”.

She went on:

This Labour government, which is a city-dwelling, socialist government that does not understand the countryside, must now listen to farmers, because I’ve never known farmers this angry … The fact they’re coming to London today in so many numbers from all over the country shows just how worried they are.

Conservative MPs including Kemi Badenoch, the party leader, and Victoria Atkins, the shadow environment secetary (right, in the union flag jacket), posing for a photograph at the farmers’ rally, which they are supporting.
Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

The Green party is siding with the farmers. This is from Emily O’Brien, a councillor on Lewes district council and the Greens’ agricultural and rural welfare spokesperson.

Farmers are feeling abandoned. They have suffered badly from Brexit, both via detrimental trade conditions and reduced subsidies. And tax breaks for agricultural land have inflated land values, making it harder for both new entrants and existing farmers.

It is right to clamp down on those who buy farmland to avoid tax and the Green party strongly supports wealth taxes.

But we also need the government to take action to ensure that hard working farmers can earn a decent income. In particular, in the face of our climate and nature crises, we need subsidies to focus on encouraging farmers to shift to nature-friendly farming. This will protect our food security and support the rural economy while allowing wildlife to recover.

Steve Reed says, if farmers feel betrayed, they should blame Tories for state public finances were in after election

In an interview with the BBC, Steve Reed, the environment secretary, defended imposing inheritance tax on some farms when Labour said in opposition that it was not planning to do that. Asked why the government changed its mind, he replied:

After we won the election, we discovered that the Conservatives have left a £22bn black hole in the public finances. And if we want to fix our National Health Service, rebuild all schools, provide the affordable housing that rural communities and across the country rely on, then we’ve had to ask those with the broader shoulders to pay a little bit more.

Asked if he understood why farmers felt betrayed, he said:

I’m sure we all feel betrayed because of the state that the Conservatives left the economy in. A £22bn pound black hole isn’t a small problem. It’s massive, and fixing that is necessary if we want to stabilise the economy and rebuild our public services.

Reed also restated the government’s claim that only around 500 estates would be affected by the changes every year. He said he was “very confident” in its figures, which he said had been endorsed by the Office for Budget Responsibility.

As Helena Horton explains here, the 500 estates figure only covers farms using agricultural property relief. But farmers also use business property relief to avoid inheritance tax, and the rules about this are also being tightened under budget plans. That’s why farmers say the real number of families affected every year is higher.

Steve Reed being interviewed by the BBC Photograph: BBC News

Keir Starmer is still at the G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, where they are three hours behind UK time and so the day is just getting going. Yesterday Starmer had a series of bilateral meeting, including with Xi Jinping, the Chinese president, and with Narendra Modi, the Indian PM. Relations with both those countries are not straightforward. Starmer probably had a much easier time talking to Justin Trudeau, the Canadian PM. Here is a photo of when they met for a beer last night.

Keir Starmer with the Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau during a bilateral meeting at the G20 summit last night. Photograph: WPA/Getty Images
Pro-farming protesters outside the gates of parliament this morning. Photograph: Carl Court/Getty Images

These are from my colleague Joanna Partridge, who is at the NFU rally at Church House.

Room full of farmers in London attending @NFUtweets mass lobby event to protest against government budget changes to inheritance tax.
NFU President Tom Bradshaw called it a “extraordinary” betrayal pic.twitter.com/kQsDk49lJO

— Joanna Partridge (@JoannaPartridge) November 19, 2024

NFU President Tom Bradshaw welled up just a couple of minutes into his speech to farmers and paused as overcome with emotion. “Good for you” came a shout from a farmer in the audience. pic.twitter.com/q9cSvZzpnt

— Joanna Partridge (@JoannaPartridge) November 19, 2024

Sue and William Hosegood, dairy farmers from Devon with 3 sons working on the farm, have come to London to protests against budget changes to inheritance tax. pic.twitter.com/bTxrBB8leA

— Joanna Partridge (@JoannaPartridge) November 19, 2024

Rupert Harrison, chief of staff to George Osborne when Osborne was chancellor, reckons that the Treasury could find a more effective way of raising money from the mega-wealthy who are buying farms to dodge inheritance tax. The NFU says it thinks a better policy could be devised. (See 9.35am.) Harrison posted these on social media yesterday with an example of how this could be done.

Labour’s family farm tax problem should be really easy to fix, and they could probably even do it in a revenue neutral way – eg instead of 20% above £1m go to 30% above £5 million.

They’ve got it wrong, and if you’re going to have to do a U-turn then best to get on with it.

This would also actually raise more from the people they’re really trying to target who are using the relief for tax avoidance.

UK retailers warn Reeves of £7bn hit from budget tax rises

Large UK retailers including Tesco, Boots, Marks & Spencer and Next have written to Rachel Reeves to say that a £7bn increase in annual costs after last month’s budget would lead to job cuts and higher prices, Mark Sweney reports.

NFU president says farmers willing to work with ministers on alternative policy to ‘stop people using land as tax dodge’

In an interview with BBC News, Tom Bradshaw, president of the NFU, said that farmers felt particularly aggrieved because last year, when Steve Reed was shadow environment secretary, he said Labour was not planning to change agricultural property relief (the inheritance tax exemption). He said farmers only started hearing rumours that the government was going to go back on this about a week before the budget.

He said he did not accept the government’s claims that most farms will not be affected by the change. Instead, he said, “75% of the commerical farms in the United Kingdom will be within the scope of this policy change.”

Bradshaw also said farmers were willing to work with the government to produce a better version of the policy. He explained:

This policy is ill thought through. There’s still a 20% benefit for the uber-wealthy to invest in agricultural land, and with the changes they’ve made to pensions, they’ve now incentivised people to rip money out of pensions and invest in up to £1m of agricultural land. That is not going to deliver for food security. It’s absolutely nonsensical. It’s not joined up. There’s no thought about the impact on food production or the families that produce this country’s food …

Let’s sit down [with the government]. Give us the question. Tell us what the exam question is. We will work with you. If you want to stop people using land as a tax dodge, let’s work out the policy that does that. But this policy is not the answer.

Tom Bradshaw, president of the NFU, interviewed on BBC News Photograph: BBC News
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Some farmers have been driving tractors into Parliament Square to publicise the protest.

British farmers driving tractors into Westminster this morning. Photograph: Tolga Akmen/EPA
Farmers driving tractors past “Big Ben” Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images
A farmer joining the protest. Photograph: Tolga Akmen/EPA

Here is a story from Jamie Grierson this morning about the protests.

Farmers arrive in Whitehall for protest about inheritance tax plan

Good morning. There is an old Westminster adage that says governments should never pick fights with professions that feature as characters in childrens’ books. Voters are happy to see people like bankers, managers and property developers get hammered, the theory goes, but they are inclined to sympathise with postmen (note to the Guardian style guide editors – it is Postman Pat, not Postal worker Pat), doctors, train drivers – and of course farmers. As the last two years have shown, governments have not always been guided by this rule, but it has some merit nevertheless.

Which is why today’s protests in Westminster will be so interesting. It is the first big, public showdown between the farming lobby and the Labour government and, with both sides digging in, it probably won’t be the last.

Farmers are angry because they believe plans in the budget applying inheritance tax to bigger farms will result in families who have been farming the same land for generations having to sell up to pay the inheritance tax bill. The government claims most proper farmers won’t be affected, and that it is entirely right to close a loophole that increasingly is being exploited by very rich people who do not have a clue how to drive a tractor but who want to pass on vast wealth to their children tax free.

Helena Horton has written a good explainer testing the arguments on both sides.

Steve Reed, the environment minister, has defended the tax changes. This morning he posted this on social media.

Half of farmland sold last year went to non-farmers including wealthy individuals trying to avoid inheritance tax.

It’s right that tax changes will ensure everyone pays their fair share – and young farmers can realise their dream of buying their own farm.

And the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs has been publicising this joint statement from Reed and Rachel Reeves, the chancellor.

But Tom Bradshaw, president of the NFU, says that farmers would keep going until they got the government to change its mind. He told Sky News this morning.

[Protests] will carry on. They cannot have a policy in place which has such disastrous human impacts and think we’re going to go quiet.

We don’t know what’s next, but I know the membership have never been so united in trying to overturn something in the time that I’ve been farming.

Asked if farmers could carry on until the government backed down, Bradshaw replied: “Absolutely.”

Here is the agenda for the day.

9am: The National Farmers Union holds a rally at Church House in Westminster.

11am: Farmers hold a separate protest in Whitehall.

11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

11.30am: Wes Streeting, the health secretary, takes questions in the Commons.

11.45am: Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, gives a speech on policing reform at the National Police Chiefs’ Council conference.

Late morning (UK time): Keir Starmer is doing interviews with broadcasters at the G20 summit in Brazil.

2.30pm: Steve Reed, the environment secretary, gives evidence to the environment committee about the work of his department.

5pm (UK time): Starmer holds a press conference in Brazil.

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