East farmers take part in Westminster tractor protest over 'threat to food security'

A "go slow" convoy of more than 120 tractors rolled its way through Westminster last night

Author: Sian RochePublished 26th Mar 2024

Farmers, including some from the East, have converged on Westminster for a tractor protest against "substandard imports and dishonest labelling" they warn are threatening food security.

Organised by campaign groups Save British Farming and Fairness for Farmers of Kent, a "go slow" convoy of more than 120 tractors rolled its way through Westminster last night - demanding action on food security.

They want an end to trade deals which they say are allowing imports of food produced to standards that would be illegal in the UK and undercutting British farmers.

Organisers also criticise labelling that allows products to bear a Union flag when they have not been grown or reared in Britain.

"Consumers think it's made in Britain - it's not"

Spencer Campbell's a first generation pork farmer in Suffolk: "The biggest problem that we face is that there's no need for our pork, because it's being brought in from other countries.

"Then, because it's being processed in the UK, when it comes to supermarkets they're marking it as a British product, with the Union Jack flag, so the consumers, who wouldn't know any better think it's made in Britain - but it's not."

Save British Farming founder Liz Webster said the situation risked food security and the nation's health.

Trade deals with New Zealand, Australia, and the CPTPP deal with 11 countries including Canada, Japan and Mexico, along with a lack of import checks, were allowing lower standard foods into the country, she said.

British producers had also lost the level playing field with EU farmers and within the UK, Ms Webster warned.

She said European farmers were still receiving subsidies, had freedom of movement for labour, and had continued to have access to British markets, enabling them to undercut farmers in Britain.

Ms Webster said the current situation was "like going out with the English football team to the World Cup and saying 'off you go, you've got chains on your legs and chains on your hands'. We are completely and utterly disadvantaged".

At the same time, the new English agricultural policy of paying farmers for environmental measures such as habitat creation was taking land out of food production, she said.

"We need a radical change of policy"

Ms Webster said: "In 2019, this Government was elected with a mandate to uphold our standards and deliver a ready-made deal with the EU which would see British agriculture boom.

"It is now entirely obvious that they have totally betrayed us all.

"Polling shows that the public back British farming and food and want to maintain our high food standards and support local producers.

"We need a radical change of policy and an urgent exit from these appalling trade deals which will decimate British food."

She criticised the Government for changing its trade and agricultural policies, and then not monitoring food security closely enough, warning the UK could have to compete with other countries for supplies.

And Ms Webster called for alignment with European regulations to support British farmers.

Jeff Gibson, founder of Kent Fairness for Farmers, said: "It's so important that our message about substandard imports, dishonest labelling and concerns for food security is heard.

"With an election looming, we want to ensure the next incoming government takes up our cause."

Geoffrey Philpott, a cauliflower farmer in east Kent, who is bringing three tractors to the rally, said: "I hope to be farming for many years to come, but if things don't change, I won't be and I won't be employing the 14 people who work for me.

"Then we will be reliant on foreign produce that will not have the high standard of UK production.

"Once that happens, we could be held to ransom over supply and pricing."

What does the government say?

Farming Minister Mark Spencer said:

"We firmly back our farmers. British farming is at the heart of British trade, and we put agriculture at the forefront of any deals we negotiate, prioritising new export opportunities, protecting UK food standards and removing market access barriers.

"We’ve maintained the £2.4 billion annual farming budget and recently set out the biggest ever package of grants which supports farmers to produce food profitably and sustainably. We are also looking at ways to further improve fairness in the supply chain, and have launched a consultation to make food labelling fairer, supporting British farmers and growers and ensuring high-quality British produce get the recognition they deserve."

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