Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

World Europe

Farmers target PM Starmer in protest against new UK tax rules

Farming unions have called the planned changes 'disastrous'



Farmers gather on the Promenade, outside the venue of the Welsh Labour Party conference in Llandudno, north-west Wales on November 16, 2024, as Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks to delegates inside.
Image Credit: AFP

LONDON: Hundreds of farmers, many in tractors, gathered in Wales on Saturday to protest against UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his government's decision to change inheritance tax rules for farms.

Finance minister Rachel Reeves announced last month that farming assets worth more than £1.0 million ($1.26 million) will be liable for 20-per cent inheritance tax from next year.

Farmers have warned that family farms may have to be split up, although Starmer says that only a "small number" will be affected.

Farming unions have called the planned changes "disastrous", and around 200 farmers gathered outside the Welsh Labour conference in Llandudno on Saturday, where Starmer was speaking inside.

Starmer told delegates that he would defend the government's budget "all day long".

Advertisement

Around 40 tractors parked outside the venue.

A larger protest is planned in London on Tuesday.

Demonstrators displayed signs reading "food shortage soon" and "Labour war on countryside".

Protest organisers Digon yw Digon, which means "Enough in Enough" in Welsh, accused the government of not "working or listening to us".

Farmer Gareth Wyn Jones said farmers would deliver a letter to Starmer, warning him not to "bite the hand that feeds you".

Advertisement

"They're destroying an industry that's already on its knees and struggling, absolutely struggling, mentally, emotionally and physically," he told Sky News.

Advertisement