Labour MPs refuse to carry in-person surgical procedures after receiving abuse over insurance policies affecting farmers and pensioners
Newly elected Labour MPs are refusing to hold in-person surgeries after receiving abuse over the Government’s policies on farmers and pensioners.
Insiders said the 2024 intake has been shocked by the level of hatred MPs receive, with some struggling to adjust to public life.
One MP was seen ‘crying in the corridor’ in Parliament over the vitriol they received over Government decisions, including the inheritance tax raid on farms and scrapping of the winter fuel allowance for many pensioners.
‘There is a build-up of hatred, particularly for those with rural constituencies,’ a senior MP said. ‘People feel they’ve got to let their anger out, and they are more aggressive in their response.’
One threat, seen by The Mail on Sunday, involved a Labour MP being told he will need ‘extra security’ following Chancellor Rachel Reeves‘s decision to scrap inheritance tax exemptions for farms.
Labour MPs are refusing to hold in-person surgeries after receiving abuse over the Government’s policies on farmers and pensioners, including Rachel Reeves’ decision to hike inheritance tax on farms
A senior MP said there was ‘a build-up of hatred’ for those representing rural constituencies (file photo)
A senior source said: ‘People are scared. Some MPs are quite young without a lot of experience.
‘Others didn’t realise the effect it would have on their family life. They don’t feel they have enough support.’
Of the 650 politicians elected in July, 335 were first-time MPs. Parliament has been inviting MPs into additional security briefings as a result of the threats and providing additional support, sources said.
Every MP was also given a panic alarm in their Commons ‘welcome packs’ for the first time this year. The alarms had previously been available on request since the murder of Labour MP Jo Cox near a constituency surgery in 2016.
Despite these extra measures, some MPs are not holding in-person surgeries, moving them online instead.
But veteran MPs say this undermines democracy. ‘Part of this job is that we meet people face-to-face,’ said one.
Ministers have defended the inheritance tax changes for farmers announced in the Budget, with Ms Reeves saying the nation cannot afford to keep their exemption.
She told the BBC last week that ’40 per cent of the benefit was felt by seven per cent of the wealthiest landowners. I don’t think that it is affordable.’
But Conservative MPs have warned about the toll on older farmers. Shadow Environment Secretary Victoria Atkins says she has received reports of older farmers being ‘hugely distressed’ by the planned changes.
In an article for MailOnline, she says: ‘It is simply devastating. We already know that mental health among farmers is a huge concern. It can be a lonely and isolating line of work… this latest challenge will only add to the burden.’
Ms Reeves defended her inheritance tax raid, saying that it was not ‘affordable’ to keep farmers’ exemption (file photo)
Around 5,000 farmers will descend on London on November 19 in protest against the plans (file photo)
She says the tax raid will ‘threaten food security and destroy small family farms’
Last week Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said she will reverse the ‘cruel’ decision.
Around 5,000 farmers will descend on London on November 19 in protest against the plans.
A House of Commons spokesman said: ‘The ability for members and their staff to perform their Parliamentary duties safely, both on and off the estate, is fundamental to our democracy.
‘Abuse and intimidation is completely unacceptable. As part of the comprehensive induction of MPs in the new Parliament, a full range of security advice and services has been provided to new and returning members.’
Thanks to our farmers, our food chains stay intact and secure. Labour’s Budget decision puts all this at risk, says VICTORIA ATKINS, Shadow Environment Secretary
There are children in our cities who do not know where our food comes from. It’s not their fault: the fields, cattle sheds and flour mills which produce our staples can feel a million miles away from hectic modern lives in urban centres where cost, speed and convenience are often paramount.
The people who produce the food so that we can pop into our local supermarket and buy what we need do so without the recognition they deserve. Thanks to our farmers, their staff and their families (often the same people), our food chains stay intact and we have a high degree of food security. And this certainty is now at risk from the decisions Labour has made in the Budget.
Food security is national security. Labour’s manifesto and candidates repeated this line. And yet, four months in government and they have reneged on their promises to support the very people that produce our food. But more than that, they have outlined crass plans that will both threaten food security and destroy small family farms up and down this country. They have demonstrated starkly that they neither value nor understand rural communities. Same old Labour.
The people who produce the food so that we can pop into our local supermarket and buy what we need do so without the recognition they deserve, writes VICTORIA ATKINS (pictured in May)
Farmers tend to be asset rich but cash poor. Family farms are passed down through generations, thanks to Agricultural Property Tax Relief and Business Tax Relief. These are not “loopholes” as Rachel Reeves describes them, but careful tax planning policies that have evolved over decades to protect family businesses and farms from being split up upon death. The measures set out by Rachel Reeves and Keir Starmer will rip this up. The family farm tax means that land and assets that generations of farmers have nurtured will have to be sold in order to pay death duties – a move that will affect tens of thousands of farms.
I have already been contacted by the NFU, who have been in touch with many older farmers who are hugely distressed. It is simply devastating.
We already know that mental health amongst farmers is a huge concern. It can be a lonely and isolating line of work. There are some fantastic charities that exist, but this latest challenge will only add to the burden. My colleague, Aphra Brandreth MP, will be bringing forward a debate this week on how we can improve mental health amongst agricultural communities and I am sure this will be raised.
Labour have chosen to wage war on an industry that is already under pressure. Rather than give farmers the confidence that they need to invest in their farms, they are ripping up the protections they need to survive. With some farmers already at breaking point, the human cost could be very serious.
I am proud that Kemi Badenoch challenged Keir Starmer on his plans this week, and made clear that we Conservatives will reverse Labour’s family farm tax. This is the first policy commitment since Kemi became the Leader. We cannot allow Labour to break British farming.
Finally, a message to every farmer, every farming family, every farm worker and every rural community in Britain – we Conservatives stand with you and we will fight these plans. Our farmers feed us and they now need us to stand up for them and stop the family farm tax.