Íæż½ã½ã

From the editor: Olivia Midgley - Politicking over bovine TB risks reversing hard-fought gains

Politicisation of bovine TB is one of the reasons the disease crisis spiralled so badly out of control, and Labour's pledge to end badger culling if it comes to power next year therefore risks undoing all the progress that has been made.

clock • 2 min read
From the editor: Olivia Midgley - Politicking over bovine TB risks reversing hard-fought gains

Labour has always pedalled an anti-badger cull rhetoric, so Shadow Farming Minister Daniel Zeichner's statement this week will come as no surprise. However, with Labour looking likely to be the party charged with forming a new Government, the prospect is suddenly very real.

It also begs the question of what will happen in Scotland too, with Labour rising in the polls as support for the SNP wanes. While bTB is nowhere near as big an issue in Scotland as it is in England and Wales, it is usually described by farming leaders as being the 'wolf at the door' and that if wildlife control does need to be carried out in future, the option must be there to do so.

While we must not ignore the politicking that has taken place among Conservatives too (think back to Boris and Carrie Johnson wading in on the Derbyshire cull), the day today toll of dealing with bTH on-farm is pushing some farmers and their businesses to the brink. And as the Government-commissioned Charles Godfray review stated, bTB must be depoliticised. Otherwise, it makes running an eradication scheme impossible.

What must come next is a sensible discussion using the available science and statistical evidence - which shows a clear correlation between badger culling and a reduction in cattle herd bTB incidence rates - to set out a carefully thought-out plan to get to bTB-free by 2038.

If there is no intention to continue with intensive culling, there must be an option to look at the data and make an informed decision on a case by case basis. Labour's ruling out of that option would risk slowing any progress and then pushing it into reverse.

If Labour is serious about winning over rural voters, it must show leadership by using every tool in the toolbox, or risk presiding over a resurgence of bTB and riding roughshod over hard-fought gains.

2011 JOHN DEERE 5100R

£±Ê°¿´¡

2022 CASE IH PUMA 165CVX

£±Ê°¿´¡

2002 LANDINI GHIBLI 80

£±Ê°¿´¡

More on Politics

Dame Therese Coffey nominated for political peerage

Dame Therese Coffey nominated for political peerage

Ms Coffey once blamed the Government's lack of preparedness for Storm Babet in the East of England due to rain coming from the 'wrong direction'

clock 20 December 2024 • 1 min read
Not too late to change on bovine TB policy, says Ulster Íæż½ã½ã' Union

Not too late to change on bovine TB policy, says Ulster Íæż½ã½ã' Union

UFU said it has been told by Northern Ireland's Chief Veterinary Officer that the current bTB strategy review was still in ‘draft form' and had not yet undergone scrutiny by policy developers

Rachael Brown
clock 20 December 2024 • 2 min read
Too many farmers dependent on Government Schemes, says Farming Minister

Too many farmers dependent on Government Schemes, says Farming Minister

Speaking at a webinar hosted by the Tenant Íæż½ã½ã Association (TFA), Farming Minister Daniel Zeichner said a key theme from the debate around Agricultural Property Relief (APR) reform was the ‘low level of returns' among farm businesses

Rachael Brown
clock 20 December 2024 • 3 min read