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Brexit 'could put countryside, farming and wildlife at risk' |
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#26 |
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Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 59,682
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No need to panic. I'm sure we've got a competent minister in charge of DEFRA.
Oh heck, it's Andrea Leadsom. Wasn't she famous for something for a few minutes last summer? Farmers don't seem very impressed with her: http://news.sky.com/story/andrea-lea...rmers-10718020 |
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#27 |
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Join Date: Apr 2014
Posts: 10,592
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Quote:
No need to panic. I'm sure we've got a competent minister in charge of DEFRA.
Oh heck, it's Andrea Leadsom. Wasn't she famous for something for a few minutes last summer? Farmers don't seem very impressed with her: http://news.sky.com/story/andrea-lea...rmers-10718020 |
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#28 |
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Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Wammy's House
Posts: 4,784
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Here's an interesting take on it all BTL on the Guardian - tl;dr - the UKe meat industry could be ruine, but this makes for good headlines.
The increasingly downmarket and desperate Telegraph was also on board with the baffling Leadsom speech, proclaiming “Brexit to spell the end of burdensome EU billboards for farmers”. The Tel’s enthusiasm knew no bounds: “Following Britain's departure from the EU in 2019 the Government will scrap rules which require farmers and rural businesses to pay for and display billboards or posters which publicize the EU contribution for grants to grow their businesses … These signs measure as much as 6ft x 4ft and must be displayed permanently to avoid a penalty of thousands of pounds. The Government will also ditch the ‘three crop rule’ which sets out how many different crops farms must plant each year”. Only further down the Tel’s article does reality intervene: if the billboards go, then with the certainty of night following day, so will the subsidies that go with them. Falling back on WTO tariff rules - providing the other 160-plus WTO members agree, of course - will mean the UK’s lamb and beef exports would face tariffs of 30% and 50% respectively. But, so what? Well, 95% of our lamb exports go to other EU member states. And there are plenty of other suppliers waiting in the wings, able to undercut our prices once WTO tariffs are applied - those from, for instance, South America. Yet all that is subservient to the relentless march of obligatory good news, with the Mail also chipping in “The [EU] rules also require farmers to set aside 5 per cent of their land for ‘ecological focus areas’ around hedges, ditches and ponds … Whitehall officials say that, outside of the EU, more ‘common sense definitions’ can be introduced”. We can see that this line is suspect, because was can also see where it originated this morning, as early as 1201 hours. Yes, to no surprise at all, the highly selective promotion of Andrea Leadsom emanated from the perpetually thirsty Paul Staines and his rabble at the Guido Fawkes blog. All the talk there was of “Barmy Brussels diktats”, rather than the grim reality which would hit and most likely decimate our farming industry. But that’s what you get when you go with Fake News sites. And the incessant pushing of only positive stories, without letting reality intervene. Another fine mess, once again. |
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