My family has grown Britain’s food for 140 years. Here’s what politicians don’t understand about farming | Clare Wise
We’ve cared for our farm through war, pandemic and money worries. The inheritance tax row shows how little the government respects that
- Clare Wise is a farmer based in County Durham
If you are familiar with the pangs of parental guilt, then you can relate to owning a farm. Take that gut-wrenching, often irrational feeling, amplify it, and welcome to being a farmer. From the moment you’re born into a family farm, there’s a weight of expectation on you to look after it, to put it before yourself, to uphold your family’s pride. All farm kids know they don’t open presents on Christmas morning until the animals are fed, that parents miss special occasions because cows are calving, and that hopes of a foreign holiday are almost nil, at least on a livestock farm such as mine.
Owning a farm is like playing a game of pass the parcel with a valuable gift, but the one who unwraps the present is very much the loser of the bunch. From an early age, it’s drilled into you that the farm, the land and its legacy are things you carry and pass on to your children. We don’t see the farms we inhabit as truly ours: they’re generational assets that produce food for the masses. That is why farmers are putting up a huge fight against the government’s new inheritance tax changes. It’s hard not to feel as though this policy is a land grab by ministers who have no idea about how farming works.
Clare Wise is a farmer based in County Durham
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...-
‘They don’t understand my life’: what the Democrats misread about America
World - Financial Times - November 7 -
What left-wing intellectuals don’t understand about Trump’s victory
Politics - The Hill - November 11 -
‘They don’t understand business’: corporate Britain cools on Labour
Business - Financial Times - November 17 -
At COP29 Politicians Are Talking About Climate Change. Here’s What’s Happening.
World - The New York Times - 4 days ago -
At COP29 Politicians Are Talking About Climate Change. Here’s What’s Happening.
Science - The New York Times - 4 days ago -
‘We’re a fierce advocate and a wise friend’: Here’s what AARP’s new CEO will do for its 38 million members.
Business - MarketWatch - November 16 -
What to expect for Thanksgiving food prices this year
Top stories - CBS News - 5 days ago -
Here is what my final polling data says about the US presidential election | John Zogby
World - The Guardian - November 5
More from The Guardian
-
Displaced residents return to southern Lebanon as Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire appears to hold – Middle East crisis live
World - The Guardian - 55 minutes ago -
Trump’s Gorka pick met with outrage: he’s ‘as dangerous as he is unqualified’
World - The Guardian - 2 hours ago -
British mother of Egyptian political prisoner to press Lammy to take action
World - The Guardian - 7 hours ago -
Elusive deer spotted wearing high-vis jacket in Canada: ‘Who is responsible?’
World - The Guardian - 2 hours ago -
Seoul slows down under blanket of heaviest November snow in 100 years
World - The Guardian - 6 hours ago