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Jeremy Clarkson has arrived in Westminster to join tens of thousands of farmers for a protest against Labour’s hated inheritance tax raid.
The 64-year-old is defying the advice of his doctors to ‘avoid stress’ while recovering from a life-saving heart operation by joining his Clarkson’s Farm co-star Kaleb Cooper at the rally.
Farmers were seen arriving at the event in tractors before a rally attended by Tory politicians including party leader Kemi Badenoch and shadow foreign secretary Dame Priti Patel.
During a separate event today, the National Union of Farmers chief Tom Bradshaw broke down in tears while telling a hall full of farmers that they had received a ‘stab in the back’.
‘You know what this means for our families, our children and our farms,’ he told the audience at Church House in Westminster.
With his voice breaking with emotion, he continued: ‘It is wrong. It is wrong on every level. Just as bad as that it won’t achieve what the Treasury set out to achieve. This is a policy that will rip the heart out of the British family farm.’
Jeremy Clarkson arrives at the farmers’ protest in Westminster
Farmers arriving at Westminster in their tractors for today’s protest against Labour’s inheritance tax grab
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch was among those present at today’s rally in Westminster
Shadow foreign secretary Dame Priti Patel joins Conservative MPs and farmers to protest outside the Houses of Parliament
Finishing his speech, he received a standing ovation and was followed onto the stage by a group of farmers holding up a banner reading: ‘The family farm tax’.
Speaking before the speech, a fourth-generation family farmer said there is a possibility he and other farmers will strike if changes to agricultural property relief are not reversed.
Richard Wainwright, 58, from Halifax, West Yorkshire, said: ‘We are talking about possibly striking. I hope it doesn’t come to that because that’s seriously going to impact the food chain.’
On the impact on his farm, he said: ‘We’ve got to possibly sell a 20% share of the farmland to be able to cover the tax bill. For us it’s around £600,000 we are going to have to pay.
‘It’s like I’m going to have to buy my own farm back.’
Earlier, Mr Bradshaw accused Environment Secretary Steve Reed of treating the farming industry with ‘contempt’.
‘The way he’s treated the industry with contempt in what he’s been writing has landed very, very badly,’ he told LBC.
‘There’s huge mistrust in the numbers, even Defra and the Treasury can’t agree on the number.
‘Our numbers suggest that 75% of commercial farms, those farms producing this country’s food, are caught in the eye of this storm.’
In a separate interview, he told Sky News that farmers will continue to push back until the Government scraps agricultural inheritance tax changes.
‘This will carry on. They cannot have a policy in place which has such disastrous human impacts and think we’re going to go quiet,’ he said.
‘We don’t know what’s next, but I know the membership have never been so united in trying to overturn something in the time that I’ve been farming.’
Shadow environment secretary Victoria Atkins also weighed in today to condemn the Government’s ‘economically illiterate’ approach to tax.
She told GB News: ‘If any of us care about our countryside, if we want to see the picturesque views that we have – across my home county of Lincolnshire, but (also) across the country – if we care about the quality of our crops, if we care about animal welfare, then family farming in the United Kingdom is critical to achieving all of these aims.
‘And this claim that Labour has come up with today to try and divert attention away from the march, that somehow this inheritance tax and this rise in national insurance is to pay for the NHS, is economically illiterate.
‘Because, as we know, this is going to raise a fraction of what, in fact, we put into the NHS and are proud to do so.’
Demonstrators held signs reading ‘no farmers, no food, no future’ as the protest got underway
Stacks of wheelbarrows were set up along Whitehall as the protest got underway
A large bale of hay was brought in by one protester on the back of a truck
The rally is taking place alongside a separate ‘mass lobby’ event inside the Houses of Parliament
It follows an extraordinary intervention from tech billionaire Elon Musk, who last night accused Sir Keir administration of ‘going full Stalin’ against British farmers.
The Prime Minister has said that he understands changes to inheritance tax are ‘causing concern’ for farmers but insisted ‘the vast majority of farms’ will not be affected.
Speaking at the G20 summit in Brazil on Monday, he said: ‘On the question inheritance tax, look I do understand that it’s causing concern.
‘But if you take a typical case of a couple wanting to pass a family farm down to one of their children, which would be a very typical example, with all of the thresholds in place, that’s £3 million before any inheritance tax is paid.’
‘And that’s why I’m confident that the vast majority of farms and farmers will not be affected at all by that aspect of the budget.’
Clarkson told The Sun: ‘I will be there’, along with Charlie Ireland and Cooper.
After being shown an opinion poll saying he is more trusted than the PM, the Chancellor and new Tory Leader Kemi Badenoch, he joked: ‘I’d become an MP – but if I am paying inheritance tax I could not afford to take the pay cut.’
The protests come after tax changes announced in the budget mean from April 2026 farmers will have pay 20 per cent inheritance tax on farms worth more than £1million – although this rises to £3million if farmers take advantage of additional tax relief measures.
Although the rate is half the 40 per cent rate paid by ordinary members of the public, farmers argue farms will have to be broken up or sold to pay death duties.
One of the protest rally’s organisers, Clive Bailye ((CRCT)), founder of The Farming Forum website, warned of strikes, blockades and go-slows if ministers fail to pay attention to farmers’ anger.
‘There’s a lot of militancy in the farming community over this,’ said Mr Bailye, a Staffordshire arable farmer.
‘If we don’t get anything out of Tuesday’s rally I can see things getting bad very fast.
‘If the next generation can’t afford to continue with the farming way of life then they’ve got nothing to lose. That makes them very dangerous – farmers have got the ability to cause economic chaos.
‘We’ve seen how European farmers have managed to get their governments to change policy. Talk of a farmers’ strike is really gathering momentum, and you could see blockades or go-slow protests.’
National Farmers’ Union (NFU) leader Tom Bradshaw delivered an emotional address
Downing Street has refused to be drawn on Elon Musk’s comments on X that Britain is ‘going full Stalin’ in its approach to farmers
He added: ‘If farmers tip away their own milk, they’re the ones who lost out the most – but if they feel they’re going to go out of business then they may go ahead anyway.
‘But we don’t want to cause disruption to the public because at the moment they’re on the side of farmers.’
He stressed campaigners were not demanding a full U-turn, but wanted to meet ministers to discuss how to avoid the predicted crippling impact on family-owned farms.
Meanwhile, NFU president Mr Bradshaw will accuse the government today of betraying farmers – with the tax changes affecting some 68 per cent of farmers rather than a tiny minority.
Mr Bradshaw will say: ‘I don’t think I’ve ever seen the industry this angry, this disillusioned and this upset. And given what we’ve had to be angry about in recent years that’s saying something.’
He will add: ‘To launch a policy this destructive without speaking to anyone involved in farming beggars belief.
‘And let us remember that they promised not to do this when they were wooing the rural vote. It’s not only been bungled in delivery, it’s also nothing short of a stab in the back.’
Environment Secretary Steve Reed inflamed farmers further yesterday by telling farmers to ‘check the facts’ before they protest.
Mr Reed said: ‘I know change can cause uncertainty, but if farmers check the facts they’ll see this change is fair and proportionate for everyone.’
The MP for Streatham and Croydon North added: ‘Around 40 per cent of the value of this tax loophole has gone to just 7 per cent of landowners. It’s become the most effective way for the super-rich to avoid paying their inheritance tax – and it’s costing other taxpayers a whopping £200m a year.’
Gareth Wyn Jones, a Welsh farmer who has been leading calls for a strike, said he would stop supplying his sheep and cattle for a week from today.
He predicted shortages of bread, milk and eggs in the coming weeks if ministers don’t agree to negotiations.
‘If Labour were supporting British agriculture then ministers wouldn’t be having to make contingency plans.
He added: ‘He [Keir Starmer] needs to be shown what happens if his Government bites the hand that feeds it.
‘We need to show the Government that if we’re not going to listen, we will turn off the taps of food production.’
Phil Vickery, a member of the 2003 England World Cup-winning rugby team and Cornish dairy farmer, said: ‘Keir Starmer is destroying the future of our farmers and their families.’