Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Liveupdated

Farmers’ protest live: Jeremy Clarkson pleads with Rachel Reeves to reverse inheritance tax ‘mistake’ on march

Farmers from across the country have travelled to London this morning to join protests over changes to inheritance tax rules

Alex Ross,Holly Evans
Tuesday 19 November 2024 13:11 GMT
Comments
Farmers on tractors drive through Westminster ahead of protests

Your support helps us to tell the story

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.

At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.

The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.

Your support makes all the difference.

Jeremy Clarkson has urged Rachel Reeves to admit her proposed inheritance tax hikes for farmers was a “mistake” and to back down.

Speaking to protesters on stage in Whitehall, the TV presenter said: “For the sake of everybody here, and all the farmers stuck at home today paralysed by a fog of despair by what’s been foisted upon them, I beg the government to accept this was rushed through, wasn’t thought out, and was a mistake.”

He has joined farmers for a large-scale protest in London on Tuesday to urge the government to change course over its plans, which have been described as a “stab in the back”.

First unveiled in chancellor Rachel Reeves’s Budget, the plans to impose inheritance tax on farms worth more than £1m have sparked fury among rural communities, who have contested the government’s assertion that small family farms will not be impacted by the changes.

The National Farmers’ Union (NFU) has organised an event in which 1,800 of its members will meet with local MPs at Westminster to voice their anger on Tuesday.

NFU president Tom Bradshaw said an estimated 75 per cent of commercial farm businesses “were caught in the eye of this storm” of a policy which will “rip the heart of family farms”.

Watch: Farmer predicts serious food shortages

Farmer predicts serious food shortages: 'I won't be selling any beef or lamb this week'
Andy Gregory19 November 2024 07:00

‘Day of all days'

We’re 15 minutes into our journey from Cirencester to London, via a stop at Wantage, when Chris Farr, NFU Gloucestershire county adviser, issues the first rallying call of the day.

Standing between the seats on the half-full coach, Mr Farr said: “As President Eisenhower said on D-Day, this is the day of all days.”

He tells farmers attending the mass lobby that it’s important for everyone to have their say.

“This is incredible personal,” he says. “It is different for everyone, those with big or small farms, we all have a story, and we need them to listen to us.”

Chris Farr addresses farmers on the coach from Cirencester to London
Chris Farr addresses farmers on the coach from Cirencester to London (Independent)

Alex Ross19 November 2024 06:40

Farmers on their way to London

I’m on board a coach taking around 20 farmers from Cirencester to head to London for a mass lobby aimed at reversing a government decision to introduce inheritance tax for some farms.

The coach is one of five put on by the NFU in the southern region, with groups also leaving from Exeter and Dorchester.

It’s an early start but the coach is full of chatter ahead of today’s action.

(Independent)
Alex Ross19 November 2024 06:12

‘Complete disillusionment and distrust’ among farmers, NFU president warns

NFU president Tom Bradshaw said the union’s mass lobby at Westminster will aim to get MPs to push the government to reverse the changes, which had left older farmers in particular in the “cruellest of predicaments”, unable, for example, to take advantage of the seven-year exemption for gifting assets.

Speaking ahead of the event in which three groups of 600 NFU members will have the opportunity to speak to MPs in Westminster, he said: “It’s absolutely unacceptable, the human impact of this, the pressures they have put on these people who have given everything to this country.”

The NFU president added: “There’s a complete disillusionment and distrust, and feeling of betrayal, that [the government] doesn’t understand food production or even want to understand food production.

“Farmers are cross, they’re worried, they feel they’ve nothing to lose, I don’t know where this ends,” he said, adding it was within the power of the government to take the next step.

"I don't believe the Government have any choice but to rethink this policy," he said.

Andy Gregory19 November 2024 06:00

Rally organiser accuses government of ‘not knowing their own figures'

Olly Harrison, one of the organisers of the rally in London, said of the government: “They don’t know their own figures, they have not done any homework whatsoever.

“It’s embarrassing for them, how little research they’ve done on this before they brought it in.”

He warned the move could destroy UK food production, with family businesses in food processing and retailing, as well as farming, at risk from the changes.

Tuesday’s rally aims to show “this is what we do, this is what we produce, this is whose future is being taken away”, said Mr Harrison.

Andy Gregory19 November 2024 05:00

Environment secretary insists ‘tractor tax’ will only impact minority

Environment secretary Steve Reed has hit back following a storm of criticism over the government’s plans to extend inheritance tax to family farms, claiming the “vast majority of farmers will not be affected at all”.

He blamed “misleading headlines” for the backlash to the tax, saying “only the richest estates” will be affected.

Writing in The Daily Telegraph, Mr Reed said the government has taken a “fair and balanced approach that protects family farms while also fixing the public services those same families rely on”.

Our political correspondent Millie Cooke reports:

Environment secretary hits back amid storm of criticism over ‘tractor tax’

It comes after the PM was accused of lying to farmers after the government extended inheritance tax to family farms for the first time in history

Andy Gregory19 November 2024 04:00

Northern Ireland MPs plead with ministers to rethink farming tax plans

Northern Ireland’s MPs and peers have united in a plea to the government to rethink planned changes to inheritance tax for farmers.

In a letter to Chancellor Rachel Reeves, DUP MP Carla Lockhart warned it could threaten the generational transfer of farms, disrupt rural communities and undermine the long-term security of the agricultural sector.

The Stormont Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs has estimated that around a third of farms in Northern Ireland will be affected.

It comes as farmers plan to take part in an Ulster Farmers’ Union rally in Lisburn, Co Antrim, on Monday evening.

PA19 November 2024 03:00

No 10 refuses to be drawn after Elon Musk claims government ‘going full Stalin’ on farming tax

Downing Street has refused to be drawn into a row with Elon Musk, after the tech billionaire described the government as “going full Stalin” in its approach to farmers.

Asked for a response to Mr Musk’s criticisms, Downing Street said it would not “get into a back and forth on individual comments”.

A No 10 spokesperson said: “The responses I gave this morning continue to be the case: that we will continue to engage with the industry and explain how the process works, and it remains the case that we expect the vast majority to be unaffected by the changes.”

They would not be drawn into saying whether the government rejected Mr Musk’s premise, saying: “The prime minister’s own words are very clear in terms of the support that we have for farmers and their importance, and we will continue to communicate how the scheme works to provide that reassurance.”

Andy Gregory19 November 2024 02:00

Letters | For born farmers like us it’s not about the value of the land, it’s about the legacy

In a letter to the editor, Linda Roberts from Culmington, in Shropshire, writes:

A lot of people wouldn’t get out of bed for the money we make. We’re born farmers. It isn’t about the value of the land; it is about legacy. When my Dad died in 2021, he believed that the farm would be passed to the next generation. His reward for a lifetime of hard work and investment would be the opportunity for his grandson and those beyond to continue and build.

In one sweeping statement, the chancellor has robbed my family, and many others, of that opportunity. The government has quoted facts and figures from HMRC but those figures do not show the reality of how family farming works, or the amounts of money involved. The thresholds are simply far too low.

For born farmers it’s not about the value of the land, but the legacy

Letters to the editor: our readers share their views. Please send your letters to letters@independent.co.uk

Andy Gregory19 November 2024 01:00

Confusion over how many farms will be hit by controversial tractor tax

Confusion has broken out over how many farms will be affected by Rachel Reeves’ controversial changes to inheritance tax after new figures showed her claims of one in four may be wide of the mark.

Figures produced by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) have been interpreted by farmers’ groups to suggest that up to two thirds (66 per cent) of farms could be hit by the tax grab which critics claim will destroy Britain’s family farms.

This is in stark contrast to the 28 per cent that the Treasury had claimed with officials in the two departments understood to be at loggerheads over the chancellor’s shock announcement. But a source close to environment secretary Steve Reed has blamed the National Farmers Union (NFU) for confusing the issue with incorrect analysis of Defra figures.

Our political editor David Maddox has more in this report:

Confusion over how many farms hit by tractor tax after ‘staggering’ admission

Critics argue that Defra figures suggest Treasury claims that only 28 per cent of farms will be affected are wrong

Andy Gregory19 November 2024 00:01

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in