Shorouk Express
Tractors and tanks have descended on Westminster as farmers demand the Labour government rethinks its inheritance tax plan.
Hundreds have arrived from the countryside for a protest rally over plans to introduce a 20 per cent inheritance tax rate on farms worth more than £1m.
The event, organised by Save British Farming, is the third time farmers have rallied in the capital since chancellor Rachel Reeves announced the measure last year.
The farmers have parked up their tractors along Whitehall, with the stretch of vehicles going back as far as Trafalgar Square. Four tanks have also been spotted at the protest.
Protesters can be seen holding Union Jack flags and displaying banners in support of British farming.
So far, Labour has insisted it will not U-turn on its plans – but protest organiser Liz Webster told The Independent she hoped the action would bring ministers to the negotiation table.
She accused the government of “marching into a food crisis”.
The rally comes as MPs debate an e-petition with more than 148,000 signatures calling to keep the current inheritance tax exemptions for working farms.
Earlier, Nigel Farage called for an end to “death taxes” in his address to British farmers on their way to the protest. Ms Webster said the Reform UK leader was not invited to the event, accusing him of “jumping on the bandwagon”.
UK must respect Trump’s mandate but can share views privately, Mandelson says
Britain must respect Donald Trump’s “strong and clear mandate for change”, Lord Peter Mandelson has said, amid questions over how the UK will respond to global tariffs threatened by the White House.
The UK’s top diplomat in Washington said that Sir Keir Starmer’s Government can “always make our views known privately and directly” but that it must “understand what drives him”.
Lord Mandelson acknowledged he was “concerned” about the looming prospect of tariffs and said Britain would “not necessarily agree” with every detail of the new US President’s agenda.
On how the UK could try to persuade Mr Trump to change his position on certain policy areas without alienating his administration, he told the BBC: “Well, we’ve got to take all these issues as they come, realise that the president has a very strong and clear mandate for change in the United States.
“Now that doesn’t mean to say that we’re going to agree in Britain with every single detail of what he does, but we have to respect and understand what drives him, what his mandate is to do, and how his allies need to adjust sometimes.
“And I believe that, given the relationship that we have, we can always make our views known – best, by the way, directly and privately.
“We have a strong relationship that enables us to influence the president and his policies where necessary, and it certainly should not affect our ability to work well together, and that’s what I intend remains the case.”
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Tara Cobham11 February 2025 07:19
The Labour constituencies most unhappy about the ‘tractor tax’
Under the chancellor’s plan, a 20 per cent inheritance tax rate will be introduced on farms worth more than £1 million from April 2026. But it has sparked a furious backlash in farming communities and created a problem for many newly-elected Labour MPs in rural constituencies.
Athena Stavrou11 February 2025 07:01
Labour backbenchers call for ‘meaningful tweaks’ to farm inheritance tax plan
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has faced calls for “meaningful tweaks” to planned inheritance tax on farmland from Labour backbenchers.
Sam Rushworth said that farmers who work a £5 million estate are “not millionaires”, while Julia Buckley said sector businesses currently face a choice to “go big or go bust”.
Conservative former Scottish secretary David Mundell warned that under plans to impose inheritance tax on agricultural property worth more than £1 million, farmers’ children will sell their land to private equity firms to cover the bill, and estates would instead be used for solar panels or industrial tree planting.
They made their comments during a debate about a House of Commons petition which called on Treasury ministers to carry on with a 100% relief from inheritance tax covering agricultural property.
Athena Stavrou11 February 2025 06:04
Every major supermarket turns on Starmer over tractor tax
Read the full article here:
Athena Stavrou11 February 2025 05:09
How many farmers will be affected by the changes?
According to the Treasury, some 27 per cent of estates claiming agricultural property relief (APR) were above the £1 million threshold in 2021/2022, suggesting that nearly three-quarters of farms would not fall within the scope of the charges.
The Treasury says around 500 estates a year are expected to pay inheritance tax under the changes.
However, the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) says farm businesses have also qualified separately for business property relief, which can cover things such as harvested grain and livestock, machinery and diversified businesses such as camping on a farmer’s field.
Now the two are combined, with a single £1 million allowance before inheritance tax is levied, which could mean more farms are in scope.
The NFU points to figures from the Environment Department (Defra) showing that 66 per cent of farm businesses in England have a net value of more than £1 million.
But the Government has countered that analysis, saying that looking at asset value alone does not necessarily mean the farm will be affected, as it depends on individual circumstances.
Athena Stavrou11 February 2025 04:16
150,000 sign petition to maintain current farmers tax
Monday’s tractor rally, organised by Save British Farming, comes as MPs debate an e-petition with more than 150,000 signatures calling to keep the current inheritance tax exemptions for working farms.
The petition has warned that the changes could “devastate farms nationwide, forcing families to sell land and assets just to stay on their property”.
Labour has insisted it will not make a U-turn on its plans to introduce a 20% inheritance tax rate on farms worth more than £1 million.
Athena Stavrou11 February 2025 03:01
Watch: Nigel Farage calls for end to ‘death taxes’ in address to British farmers
Athena Stavrou11 February 2025 01:59
Labour defends migration plan after being accused of mimicking Reform
The films have been criticised by human rights groups and MPs for being melodramatic, with the Refugee Council saying the government was using performative stunts to try to promote division.
Athena Stavrou11 February 2025 00:49
Labour backbenchers call for ‘meaningful tweaks’ to farm inheritance tax plan
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has faced calls for “meaningful tweaks” to planned inheritance tax on farmland from Labour MPs.
Sam Rushworth said that farmers who work a £5 million estate are “not millionaires”, while Julia Buckley said sector businesses currently face a choice to “go big or go bust”.
Conservative former Scottish secretary David Mundell warned that under plans to impose inheritance tax on agricultural property worth more than £1 million, farmers’ children will sell their land to private equity firms to cover the bill, and estates would instead be used for solar panels or industrial tree planting.
They made their comments during a debate about a House of Commons petition which called on Treasury ministers to carry on with a 100% relief from inheritance tax covering agricultural property.
Mr Rushworth told MPs: “If you inherit a £5 million farm, you’re not a millionaire, you’re the custodian of agricultural land with the responsibility to farm it to produce food for the nation.”
Athena Stavrou10 February 2025 23:32
Why have the changes been brought in?
The Government has said “difficult decisions” had to be made to fill a £22 billion fiscal hole it inherited from the Conservatives, and it is targeting the agricultural inheritance tax relief to make it fairer.
It said figures showed that 7 per cent of the wealthiest estates account for 40 per cent of the total value of agricultural property relief, costing the Treasury £219 million.
Athena Stavrou10 February 2025 22:36