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    Post-Brexit subsidy scheme leaves UK farmers ‘hugely frustrated’

    Sign up to our free Brexit and beyond email for the latest headlines on what Brexit is meaning for the UKSign up to our Brexit email for the latest insightFarmers remain “hugely frustrated” with Rishi Sunak’s government over post-Brexit subsidy payments, as ministers set out the long-awaited replacement for the EU’s agricultural support scheme.Environment secretary Steve Barclay promised it would be “easier” for farmers to get help as he revealed the structure of payments – including hundreds of pounds per hectare for maintaining habitats.But the National Farmers Union (NFU) said there were still “more questions than answers”, long after the post-Brexit consultation launched in 2018.NFU vice-president David Exwood said: “It remains hugely frustrating that nearly six years on [from the consultation] … government is still a long way behind on its commitments.”It comes as Mr Barclay also insisted that coming changes to the labelling of food products will not lead to consumers having to pay more at the supermarket tills.The government has been under pressure to finally set out its agricultural support schemes to replace EU funding since the UK left the bloc in 2020.Mr Barclay said on Thursday that premium payments will be offered to British farmers helping the environment, such as £765 per hectare for lapwing nesting plots, or £1,242 per hectare for connecting river and floodplain habitat.Environment secretary Steve Barclay says post-Brexit payments will make life ‘easier’ for farmers Farmers already carrying out work to protect nature will be offered higher payments, with the amount for maintaining grasslands, wetlands and scrub rising from £182 per hectare to £646.Applications to receive support will be open from the summer of 2024 and are designed to promote British producers while encouraging them to protect nature.Mr Barclay said: “We have listened to farmers’ feedback and set out the biggest upgrades to our farming schemes since leaving the EU, with more money, more choice and more trust to support domestic food production whilst also protecting the environment.”The cabinet minister added: “We’re also making it easier for farmers of every farm type and size to enter the schemes, and I encourage everyone to take a look at how you can join.”The NFU has been highly critical of the government over slow progress in meeting promises to boost environmental land management schemes (ELMs) aimed at replacing EU subsidies.While welcoming the increased payments and new options for support, the union said firms were still facing a minimum of 50 per cent reduction in the direct payments due in 2024.The NFU’s vice-president said the tapering of payments planned up to 2027 “continues to be very concerning”. Mr Exwood added: “We urgently need business-critical detail on how farmers and growers will smoothly transition from existing agreements to the new offer.”Changes include a 10 per cent increase in the average agreements in the sustainable farming incentive and countryside stewardship, and about 50 new actions for which farmers can be paid, such as developing robotic mechanical weeding.The government has previously said it is offering £45m for those creating new technology to make farming more efficient. There will also be different payment options, with shorter agreements of up to three years available for tenant farmers.Mr Barclay also announced government plans to change food labelling so that consumers can see if imported food does not meet UK welfare standards. The government wants people to buy more domestically produced food and would like supermarkets to have a “buy British button” on their websites.Speaking to journalists at the Oxford Farming Conference on Thursday, Mr Barclay said the changes are intended to avoid shoppers confusing imports for their British counterparts.He said: “It’s about recognising that there will be some consumers that want to pay for quality that do care about animal welfare … so it’s about empowering the consumer.”Mr Barclay added: “It’s not about closing off options for others, it’s about ensuring that someone who thinks when they see the union jack flag that the thing on the shelf is British, just making sure … that quite often that is not the case.”Ministers are hoping to have 60 per cent of the food eaten in the UK produced here, while also meeting a commitment to restore at least 30 per cent of the UK’s natural environment by 2030.Conservation groups have largely welcomed the payments for protecting habitats but said much more needs to be done to hit the 2030 target.Richard Benwell, chief executive of Wildlife and Countryside Link, said it was “very good to see Defra offer higher premium payments for nature-friendly farming choices” – but said more needed to be done to promote sustainable farming.He warned: “With six years until the legal target to halt nature’s decline, it’s impossible to imagine that we’re on track to reverse long-term decline in farmland wildlife, restore protected habitats to good condition, or stop the pollution pouring into our waterways.” More

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    Rishi Sunak should call election in May rather than ‘clinging on to power’, says Ed Davey

    The Liberal Democrats have demanded that Rishi Sunak launch a general election for May rather than “clinging on to power”.Mr Sunak has the power to hold the vote as late as January 2025, but Sir Ed Davey has urged him to call one much earlier.“I think people are fed up of waiting for a general election. They want change and it really shouldn’t be in the power of the prime minister, Rishi Sunak, to call that,” the Lib Dem leader said.“He’s clinging on to power, desperate for something to turn up. That’s not right.” More

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    Carol Vorderman ‘can’t be both’ political commentator and ‘bums and boobs’, says Shaun Bailey

    Shaun Bailey said Carol Vorderman “can’t be both” a serious political commentator and have “pictures of her bums and her boobs” on her Instagram during an appearance on GB News on Thursday, 28 December.”I would have some sympathy for that if she conducted herself like a grown-up… On one hand… she’s a serious political commentator, and then if you look at her Instagram it’s all pictures of her bums and her boobs… She can’t be both,” Lord Bailey said.Ms Vorderman called the Conservative peer a “misogynist” as she reposted a clip of the comments on X/Twitter. Lord Bailey said:  “I used a clumsy form of words to describe Carol Vorderman’s Instagram posts. The point I was trying to make is Carol lives in a world of glitz and celebrity, as her Instagram portrays, but simultaneously demonises and bullies those who hold different political views to her own.” More

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    Liz Truss resignation honours are ‘rewards for failure’, says Labour MP Jonathan Ashworth

    Liz Truss’s long-awaited resignation honours list has been branded “rewards for failure” by Labour MP Jonathan Ashworth.The Electoral Reform Society has also called for urgent reform to the “rotten and out of control” peerage system and criticised the list which proposes a new peer for every day-and-a-half Ms Truss was in office.The list which includes Tory donors and special advisers was fraught with controversy before being published, with calls for Rishi Sunak to block the handout of honours given the short-lived nature of Ms Truss’s premiership.The former prime minister resigned last October after the fallout from her disastrous mini-budget, becoming the country’s shortest-serving prime minister after just 49 days in office. More

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    ‘Move on’ from James Cleverly date rape joke, Tory MP says

    Tory MP Dame Caroline Dinenage has suggested it is time to “move on” from James Cleverly’s spiking joke.The home secretary has faced calls to quit after last week joking about putting a date rape drug in his wife’s drink – hours after the Home Office announced plans to crack down on spiking.However, no action will be taken against him as prime minister Rishi Sunak “considers the matter closed”.“It was a very ill-judged comment, but James has owned that comment and apologised,” Dame Caroline told Sky News on Friday 29 December.“So let’s move on,” she added, calling it a “silly remark”. More

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    ‘Bring it on’: Emily Thornberry says UK ‘desperate for election’

    The UK is “desperate for an election”, Emily Thornberry has claimed.Speaking to Sky News on Thursday 28 December, the shadow attorney general added that Jeremy Hunt’s spring Budget date of 6 March “seems to confirm” that voters will be heading to the polls in May.“It is the worst kept secret in parliament isn’t it, that we are likely to be heading for a May election,” Ms Thornberry said.“The country is desperate for an election, we really have to get rid of this lot and we want to have an opportunity to do so, that’s what people tell me.” More

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    James Cleverly should be ‘ashamed of himself’ for date rape joke, says Emily Thornberry

    James Cleverly should be “thoroughly ashamed of himself” over his date rape joke, Emily Thornberry has said.No action will be taken against the home secretary, as prime minister Rishi Sunak “considers the matter closed”.Mr Cleverly has faced calls to quit after last week joking about putting a date rape drug in his wife’s drink – hours after the Home Office announced plans to crack down on spiking.“That is not funny. It is a really nasty and frightening joke and he should be thoroughly ashamed of himself,” Ms Thornberry told Good Morning Britain on Thursday 28 December. More

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    Tory MP targeted by suspected arson attack says he wears stab vest to protect himself

    An MP whose north London office was targeted by a suspected arson attack on Christmas Eve says he wears a stab vest when going to public events.Mike Freer, Conservative MP for Finchley and Golders Green, said the use of vests by his colleagues is “sadly par for the course these days”.“I, personally, like some of my other colleagues, wear stab vests if I do public events,” Mr Freer told Sky News.Police on Tuesday (26 December) continued to investigate a fire started on Christmas Eve in a shed at the MP’s office.No one was in the office at the time of the blaze. More