Daily Mail

Oh deer! Goldsmith keeps job despite farm fence row

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

BEN Goldsmith will retain his government job despite breaking his own department’s rules over the release of deer from his land.

Environmen­t Secretary George Eustice acknowledg­ed the 39- year- old financier had made an ‘error’ in breaching guidelines on wild animals.

But he said the ‘rewilding toff’ had apologised and still had much to offer in his role as a board director at the Department for the Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs.

The decision means Mr Goldsmith, a longstandi­ng Tory donor and brother of environmen­t minister Zac Goldsmith, will face no consequenc­es for behaviour that has enraged many in the farming community.

Mr Eustice had been under pressure to sack Mr Goldsmith since July, when the Mail revealed red deer had escaped from his Somerset farm because of inadequate fencing. The deer damaged neighbours’ land and Mr Goldsmith admitted falsely claiming to nearby farmers that he was having the creatures rounded up.

Mr Goldsmith, an evangelist for the rewilding of the countrysid­e, also admitted feeding wild boar.

At one point he appeared to admit releasing the wild boar – a criminal offence – after telling a local farmer: ‘Some of my wild boar got loose and try as I might I was unable to retrieve them.’

But he later denied it, telling the Mail he had typed the words ‘wild boar’ in error when he had really meant to type ‘pigs’.

Defra refused to comment on Mr Goldsmith’s position as a non- executive member of its governing board while Avon and Somerset Police investigat­ed the issue of the wild boar.

But in an interview with the Mail, Mr Eustice said the police had chosen not to take the matter any further. He acknowledg­ed that Mr Goldsmith had broken Defra’s guidelines on the release of deer. These require landowners to secure their boundaries with twometre high fencing.

But he said Mr Goldsmith had apologised and should not lose his job as an adviser to the Government on the future of farming and the countrysid­e.

He added: ‘He bought some deer and hadn’t fitted the right fencing, and right equipment in place to keep those on the holding.

‘That was a mistake. And he accepts that and has apologised for it. But I think around that there’s obviously been some disputes with his neighbours.’

Mr Eustice also revealed that Defra is poised to pour public money into Mr Goldsmith’s passion for rewilding the countrysid­e.

He said: ‘There are other landowners that are interested in following a similar approach and so we are considerin­g ways in which we might support that. But only for those that want to do it.’

Police probe farming official Goldsmith in ‘wild animals’ storm

 ??  ?? In the clear: Jemima and Ben Goldsmith
In the clear: Jemima and Ben Goldsmith

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