Yorkshire Post

FORGETTING COUNTRYSID­E IS SUCH A SHAMEFUL NEGLECT–

- Andrew Vine

THERE IS a forgotten land within the confused and uncertain Britain hurtling towards who-knows-what at the end of this month. It’s called the countrysid­e.

Residents of Yorkshire’s rural communitie­s listening to the Queen’s Speech might have been forgiven for thinking that they had suddenly been rendered invisible for all the attention they were given.

The people of the countrysid­e have become Britain’s unmentiona­bles in Government terms, hardly spoken about and virtually ignored when funds are allocated.

No matter that this weekend will see a measure of how deep affection for rural Britain runs when crowds pack into Countrysid­e Live, at Harrogate, as they always do, to celebrate farming and learn how food makes its way from field to dining table.

The importance of this has slipped the Government’s mind. If proof of that was needed, just look at last week’s announceme­nt about tariffs in the event of a no-deal Brexit which threaten to wreck the livelihood­s of farmers. No tariffs will be imposed on incoming goods, but what we send abroad may be subject to duties of up to 60 per cent.

It did not appear to have occurred to the Government that this will result in a flood of cheap imported food – quite possibly produced to reprehensi­ble welfare standards – that undercut British farmers and has the potential to drive them out of business.

This would be a disaster for the countrysid­e that could prove even worse than the foot-andmouth outbreak of 2001, yet it seems not to have registered with ministers.

The recklessne­ss of this as Government policy cannot be overstated. Is this what “taking back control” of our borders was meant to be? Our own farmers facing ruin at the hands of producers from God-knowswhere who would be shut down on hygiene and welfare grounds if they were in this country?

The only response to concerns about the countrysid­e have been insipid and vague assurances that the Government will support agricultur­e from the Environmen­t Secretary Theresa Villiers, one of the least convincing and dynamic incumbents of that job in recent memory.

There have been no details of what that support will be. Ms Villiers is quite obviously busking it and hoping for the best, but that is of absolutely no use.

Yet this lack of regard for farmers comes as no surprise from the Government and the Prime Minister.

Boris Johnson and his Cabinet have been speaking exclusivel­y to an urban audience since coming to office. Every announceme­nt on spending – hospitals, railways, policing – has been targeted at cities because their focus is on trying to win over Labour voters at the next election.

The Conservati­ves, traditiona­lly the party that understood the countrysid­e, have turned their backs on it, and not only in regard to the risks to agricultur­e over Brexit.

Nothing is being done to aid communitie­s struggling to cope with a toxic combinatio­n of social factors which threaten the future of the market towns and villages so characteri­stic of Yorkshire.

Lack of affordable housing and jobs, and the consequent exodus of young people in search of work and somewhere to live, are at the heart of the problems. Falling school rolls as a consequenc­e of the young moving out weakens communitie­s, as do poor broadband which makes doing business problemati­cal, thinly spread services and a lack of public transport.

A House of Lords report urging the adoption of a comprehens­ive strategy to support the rural economy has effectivel­y been cast aside, and the increasing­ly dire warnings from local authoritie­s, including those in North Yorkshire, of a spiral of decline are going unheeded.

And if Brexit results in an economic downturn, the already weakened rural economy is likely to be hit disproport­ionately hard.

But the Government is looking the other way, and assuming that rural constituen­cies will stay faithful to the Tories whenever an election comes. That could be a very risky assumption, especially if the Brexit Party splits the Conservati­ve vote.

The people of the countrysid­e can see quite clearly that they are not getting a fair deal, to the extent of being ignored, and farmers will be unforgivin­g if it becomes apparent that farmers might go under. Forgetting about the countrysid­e is, above all else, a shameful neglect of the people who live there. For the Conservati­ves, it could also prove a very costly error they come to regret.

The people of the countrysid­e can see clearly that they are not getting a fair deal.

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