Farmers arrive in Whitehall for protest about inheritance tax plan – UK politics live
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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