Fury as HMRC hand special award to civil servant behind the Farms Tax | Politics | News


HMRC has been greeted with fury after it handed its โ€˜expert of the yearโ€™ award to the civil servant behind the hated Family Farms Tax. James Mee, the head of inheritance tax analysis, boasted about his gong on Linkedin, saying he was โ€œproud and humbledโ€ to win it last month.

Mr Mee added: โ€œThis was for my work in providing ministers with the analysis they needed to announce several major IHT reforms at last yearโ€™s Autumn Budget, including restricting agricultural and business property reliefs.โ€ Those changes, announced by Rachel Reeves in her first Budget last year, saw hundreds of thousands of farming families plunged into financial uncertainty and facing the prospect of losing their livelihoods. The policy sparked furious backlash, including repeated mass protests that shut down Whitehall, as farmers warned the Chancellor they would be forced to sell their farms in order to pay off the new inheritance tax levy.

Mr Mee, who grew up in rural Suffolk and was the childhood best friend of Ed Sheeran, was warmly congratulated on his award by fellow Mandarins and Bank of England officials, who took to Linkedin to pat him on the back.

Among them was Stephen Farrington, director of Fiscal Policy at the Treasury and former Chief of Staff at the OBR, who wrote: โ€œCongratulations James!โ€

However the award was greeted with backlash by the Tories and farming campaign groups, after a year of hurt.

John Glen, a former Treasury minister, explained: โ€œOfficials advise and Ministers decide, but I am not sure I would be celebrating failing to convey the uncertainty around the tax revenue, the negative impact on the rural economy and farmersโ€™ futures.

โ€œIn every fiscal event I was exposed to this option was laid on the table – we said โ€˜No thank youโ€™ – James was the lucky official who found Labour in charge and farmers low down on their priority list.โ€

Mo Metcalf-Fisher, head of external affairs at the Countryside Alliance, fumed: โ€œAs experts warn, the family farm tax will be a disaster for agriculture and the countryside and few have been bold enough to openly defend the policy publicly, yet alone celebrate it.โ€

โ€œThere is a deep and growing divide between rural communities and Westminster, largely due to the architects of policy that seek to do things to the countryside, rather than for it.โ€

Jonathan Roberts of the Country Land and Business Association blasted: โ€œWe congratulate James on his award. To celebrate, I would like to invite him to visit one of the 70,000 farm businesses expected to be permanently damaged by this policy.

โ€œOnce there, I would be happy to introduce him to some of the 200,000 workers across the family business sector who will lose their job.โ€

An HMRC spokesman said: โ€œIt is the duty of civil servants to support the Government of the day to develop and implement its policies as effectively as possible.

โ€œThe award was presented in recognition of expertise in providing important analysis to ministers.โ€

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