The Guardian Australia

Huge UK public support for direct action to protect environmen­t – poll

- Damian Carrington Environmen­t editor

A large majority of the UK public supports nonviolent direct action to protect the environmen­t, according to an opinion poll. People also strongly backed solar power on farmland and opposed fracking.

The poll indicates the unpopulari­ty of a recent swathe of government policies, with more than twice as many people saying they trusted Labour to protect the environmen­t as said they trusted the Conservati­ves.

The public order bill going through parliament introduces stiff penalties for protests, such as those by Just Stop Oil and Extinction Rebellion and others described as “Guardian-reading, tofueating wokerati” by the former home secretary Suella Braverman.

In the poll, 66% of people supported taking nonviolent direct action to protect the UK’s nature, with 34% opposed. Support for such action dropped to 44% among Tory supporters.

Recent direct action has included protesters throwing soup at a Van Gogh painting and blocking the Dartford

Crossing.

The government has also proposed banning solar panels on most farmland. But 75% of people, including Conservati­ve supporters, opposed this in the poll. Solar power has long been the most popular energy source in opinion polls.

On Tuesday, the government also begins legislatin­g its “Brexit freedoms bill” that could remove all EU-derived regulation­s, including 570 environmen­tal protection­s. Along with proposals to end the plan to use most farm subsidies to protect and improve the environmen­t, the moves have been described as an “attack on nature” by the nation’s largest green groups, which have not ruled out taking direct action.

In the poll, conducted by Omnisis, 68% of people said they most trusted Labour to protect and improve the environmen­t, with 32% backing the Conservati­ves.

The government aims to resume fracking in the UK, contrary to a manifesto pledge. However, only 34% of people said they would be happy to have a shale gas site in their constituen­cy, while 66% said they would not. Just over half of Conservati­ve supporters – 53% – said they would be happy living near a fracking site.

The government has already received applicatio­ns for its proposed investment zones, where planning and environmen­tal rules would be relaxed and tax breaks introduced to encourage new building and businesses. This issue split people in the poll fairly evenly, with 47% supporting the relaxation of environmen­tal protection­s in the investment zones and 53% opposing it.

The poll questioned 1382 people on 20 October and is weighted to a nationally representa­tive population. Omnisis is a member of the British Polling Council.

 ?? Photograph: Vuk Valcic/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Just Stop Oil activists blocking a road road in Islington, London, on Saturday.
Photograph: Vuk Valcic/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Just Stop Oil activists blocking a road road in Islington, London, on Saturday.

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