Western Morning News

Last ditch bid by farmers’ leaders to get food standards set in law

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THE National Farmers’ Union (NFU) has called on Parliament to adopt an amendment to the Agricultur­e Bill which they say will protect UK food standards in future trade deals.

The Government won a vote in the Commons last week to reject the House of Lords amendment to the bill which would have required agricultur­al and food imports to meet domestic standards.

NFU president Minette Batters wrote in the Mail on Sunday: “I hope that Parliament will, next week, put the Agricultur­e Bill to bed, accept Lord Curry’s amendment to strengthen the Trade and Agricultur­e Commission, provide a legal basis from which to operate and give MPs the role in agreeing our future trade deals.”

Boris Johnson spoke to Ms Batters after the Government won the vote last week and made “a cast-iron commitment not to undermine Britain’s farmers in trade deals”, she added.

“Having spoken to Trade Secretary Liz Truss and George Eustice, the Environmen­t and Food Secretary, I believe they mean it when they say they want our post-Brexit policies to boost British farming.”

Peers suggested the amendment to block the import of foodstuffs produced abroad with lower animal welfare standards, amid warnings over chlorinate­d chicken or hormone-treated beef entering the UK market from the US.

Several Conservati­ve MPs also outlined their support for the Lords amendment – including Tiverton and Honiton MP Neil Parish, chair of the Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs Committee with the division list showing 14 rebelled in an attempt to retain it - including former environmen­t secretary Theresa Villiers and Scottish Conservati­ve Party leader Douglas Ross. But it was stripped from the Bill following the vote on Monday.

The Government has argued that existing protection­s are already in place.

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