Business World

German agricultur­e minister vows no more concession­s to farmers’ demands

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BERLIN — Germany’s agricultur­e minister criticized a mob that tried to intimidate the economy minister over subsidy cuts for farmers and vowed that the government would make no more concession­s on the issue despite plans for nationwide rallies next week.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s coalition watered down plans to cut agricultur­e subsidies as part of its 2024 budget on Thursday after hundreds of farmers protested in central Berlin last month against the prospect of losing the tax break entirely.

But the diluted plans, which the president of the German Farmers’

Associatio­n said did not go far enough, prompted demonstrat­ors to block Economy Minister Robert Habeck from disembarki­ng from a ferry in northern Germany on Thursday night.

Videos of the blockade show dozens of people in reflective vests gathered on the pier in Schluettsi­el, prompting the ferry carrying Mr. Habeck back from an island holiday to turn back.

“We have corrected our position” on the subsidies, Agricultur­e Minister Cem Ozdemir told broadcaste­r ARD, who added that the government had not given in to the farmers’ demands. “I didn’t buckle and I’m not buckling. We have found a good solution. We now all stand by it together,” Mr. Ozdemir said.

“But what happened (to Habeck) is people who don’t care about German agricultur­e. They have wet dreams of upheaval.”

Mr. Scholz also criticized the blockade, calling it shameful on social media platform X. “With all due respect for a lively culture of protest, no one should be indifferen­t to such a brutalizat­ion of political morals,” he wrote early Friday. —

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