Yorkshire Post

Hate campaign against hunters hasn’t helped fox

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ON Boxing Day about 300 hunts will meet in every corner of the countrysid­e. In town squares and on village greens, groups of people from a few dozen to many thousands will come together to celebrate Christmas, their communitie­s and their hunts.

In Yorkshire, hunting remains particular­ly strong, with 20 packs of foxhounds due to meet on Tuesday as well as assorted packs of beagles and harriers. In the countrysid­e, the Boxing Day meet is no different from the tradition of Boxing Day football matches, and both are much healthier than the more recent post-Christmas habit of going shopping.

Hunting is not a “controvers­ial” activity among those who live and work in the countrysid­e. Some like it, some don’t, but the idea that this traditiona­l and slightly odd activity should have become a national political issue is fairly ludicrous wherever you are viewing it from. The fact that somewhere in the 20th century the eradicatio­n of hunts and the 40,000-odd people who follow them became, in the words of a leading Labour politician, “totemic to the Labour Party” is utterly bizarre.

The “totemic” ban was passed in 2004, but it has little to do with animals or their welfare. The chairman of the thengovern­ment inquiry stated very clearly that hunting was not cruel, and it remains perfectly legal to shoot a fox, trap a fox or snare a fox. In fact, research has shown a big drop in the UK’s fox population since the ban on hunting came into force. The one thing we can be absolutely certain of is that the fox is no better off as a result of the ban.

There can be no logical justificat­ion for such a ridiculous law so what was the real motivation for the ban? If that was not already obvious the admission of one MP as soon as the law was passed that it was “class war” was a bit of a giveaway, and the subsequent continuing campaigns against hunts that are no longer hunting foxes can leave only one conclusion. The anti-hunting movement is not really about the welfare of animals, it is about a hatred of people, and so it continues its obsessive pursuit of hunts.

Meanwhile, in the countrysid­e, support for hunting remains undimmed. More women and young people continue to take up hunting as it remains open and accessible to everyone. Hunting prevails in some of the most marginal of rural communitie­s. In many remote rural areas, hunts play an important social role in times of challenge and change.

The real shame is that this issue continues to soak up so much energy that could be used for something positive, not least given the huge challenges facing the countrysid­e in the coming years. Our ever-growing population puts more pressure on green spaces as the demand for housing and infrastruc­ture grows and when the absolute priority should be to ensure that Brexit works for the countrysid­e it remains bizarre that issues like hunting remain so far up the agenda of some politician­s.

Of course, our countrysid­e is a national treasure, but it is also a home and workplace for millions of Britons. Those who live and work there can sometimes be forgiven for feeling that the countrysid­e is treated as a theme park and its issues as political footballs.

The hunting debate, extraordin­ary as it is, cannot be viewed in isolation.

There will be thousands of people going shooting in Yorkshire on Boxing Day after a duck or a few pheasants with friends and family.

The shooting industry is one of the fastest-growing businesses in the countrysid­e, employing hundreds of people in Yorkshire and bringing visitors from all over the world from August through to January.

Meanwhile Wetherby will be hosting its traditiona­l Boxing Day race meeting and a few hardy souls will undoubtedl­y be trying to catch a fish or two. All these activities have their vocal opponents, motivated by the same ignorance and confused prejudice that drives the antihuntin­g campaign.

The resilience of hunts and their determinat­ion to continue with their traditions on Boxing Day and beyond is the best defence against the creeping agenda that would turn the countrysid­e into a theme park.

If ever there was an example of a pointless political issue, hunting is it. All the hours of Parliament­ary debate, the millions of words and endless media scrutiny have achieved exactly nothing. There has been no benefit to the huntsman or the fox, but worse than that hundreds of hours of police time and thousands of pounds of taxpayers’ money continue to be wasted.

Yet the image of huntsman, hounds and countrysid­e repeated endlessly on pub signs, paintings and illustrati­ons remains as totemic as it has ever been, and as long as hounds meet on Boxing Day in the towns and villages of Yorkshire the countrysid­e will be better for it.

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