The streets around the British government’s administrative center in Whitehall, London, filled with hundreds of tractors on Monday as farmers protested the far-left Labour government’s imposition of crippling death taxes. The farmers are supported by Nigel Farage, leader of the populist Reform Party, which has overtaken Labour in national polling after previously leapfrogging the formerly governing Conservatives (Tories).
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s changes to so-called inheritance taxes will drive many family farms, already grappling with thin margins, out of business altogether. Farage, attending the protests with British boxer Derek Chisora, expressed hope that “if this [protest] campaign is persistent and peaceful, [farmers] can get change.”
Labour claims the tax rise is necessary to ameliorate fiscal pressures. However, critics point out that the estimated £230 million (~$288m) that inheritance tax and Business Tax Relief changes will raise from 2026-27 is dwarfed by the many billions of pounds earmarked for foreign aid, migrant hotels, and payments to Mauritius as part of a plot to transfer sovereignty over the British Indian Ocean Territory to the Chinese ally. In late 2024, it was revealed that around £500m had been distributed to foreign farmers as a form of development assistance.
London today – farmers protest against the inheritance tax on family farms. What the Labour government are doing to family farms is absolutely disgraceful. It’s putting family farms at risk and food security at risk. Shame on them.
Video credit: @SaveBritishFood @NoFarmsNoFoods pic.twitter.com/GRSUZABUWh
— James Melville 🚜 (@JamesMelville) February 10, 2025
CLASS WARFARE.
Suspicions that the targeting of farmers is a kind of class warfare by the leftist government intensified when John McTernan, a party grandee and former political secretary to Tony Blair, said the country “doesn’t need small farmers,” and implied running them out of business was revenge for Margaret Thatcher closing down state-owned mines.
Alan Hughes, a farmer speaking at today’s protests, warned: “Labour do not want farmers. They want large corporations to produce food, because they know those that control the food we eat, control the nation.”
Farmer protests are also widespread in Continental Europe, where farms are being targeted by net zero climate regulations. Many protesters believe globalist governments in Western Europe are trying to run farmers out of business in large part so they can build housing on their land for the millions of migrants they have imported in recent years.
BREAKING 🚨: Whitehall in United Kingdom is totally jammed with tractors stretching out in every direction.
What a striking sight! 🚜🇬🇧 pic.twitter.com/5CYYt7Jhkf
— The British Patriot (@Britlad95) February 10, 2025