Keir Starmer warned against key Brexit betrayal by UK farming boss | Politics | News
A farming union boss has warned that access to gene editing and pesticides are in โreal jeopardyโ as the UK seeks a closer trade relationship with the EU.
Tom Bradshaw, president of the National Farmers Union (NFU), suggested the UK risks undermining its progress on technological advancements.
He said: “We welcome the principle of an improved relationship with the EU, one that reduces friction and enables better trade at a time of global instability. But the devil will be in the detail. We have to get it right, and there is real jeopardy.
โWe mustn’t sacrifice our hard-won technological advantage in gene editing, or our access to GB approved plant protection products in order to reach a deal.โ
Some crops, including strawberries, onions, potatoes, barley and wheat, are being sprayed with pesticides banned across Europe.
The UK’s post-Brexit “precision breeding” legislation has opened the door for the rapid development of more nutritious and resilient food crops using genetic technologies.
After Brexit, the UK passed the Genetic Technology (Precision Breeding) Act 2023 which created a distinction between gene editing and genetically modified foods.
Farming bosses have voiced concerns that this advantage could be lost under โdynamic alignmentโ with EU rules as the government seeks closer trading ties with Europe.
The NFU is lobbying for an exception to be applied to the government’s gene editing legislation to ensure it is not affected by a new Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) agreement being negotiated as part of Keir Starmerโs EU “reset”.
The Daily Express has launched the Give Us a Proper Brexit campaign to ensure Britain fully uses the freedoms allowed by exiting the EU.
Mr Bradshaw also took aim at the Government over the 14-month inheritance tax fight following Rachel Reevesโs 2024 budget decision to heap the levy on farmers.
Speaking at the NFUโs yearly conference in Birmingham, he said โwe still believe the inheritance tax policy is fundamentally flawedโ while calling on political parties to make axing the family farm tax a manifesto promise.
The government made a sudden U-turn in December when it reversed its stance on inheritance tax, raising relief for farms and businesses from ยฃ1million to ยฃ2.5million.
This followed a long-fought Express campaign called Save Britainโs Family Farm – which continues to demand the Government scrap the tax entirely.
