Daily Mail

Boris and Truss join rebellion to support onshore wind farms

- By Harriet Line Deputy Political Editor

FORMER PMs Boris Johnson and Liz Truss have joined a Tory backbench rebellion in a bid to overturn a ban on new onshore wind farms.

In a challenge to their successor Rishi Sunak’s authority, they have signed an amendment to allow onshore farms where there is local consent.

They backed former Cabinet minister Simon Clarke’s bid to change the Levelling Up and Regenerati­on Bill which is going through Parliament.

The amendment would force ministers to allow onshore wind farm applicatio­ns by revising planning guidance.

During her brief stint at No 10, Miss Truss vowed to relax planning laws which have led to a virtual ban on wind farms since 2015 and bring them in line with other developmen­ts.

But Mr Sunak scrapped the

policy when he became Prime Minister last month.

Mr Johnson once claimed wind farms could not ‘pull the skin off a rice pudding’, but he later supported them and said he wanted the UK to become the ‘Saudi Arabia of wind’.

However, he did not lift the ban during his three years in office following a Cabinet split on the issue and instead pushed for a major expansion of offshore wind. Mr Johnson

and Miss Truss’s decision to rebel against the Government, revealed by The Times, marks their first act of open dissent as backbenche­rs.

It will raise alarm bells in No 10 that they feel emboldened to rebel so soon into Mr Sunak’s premiershi­p.

Their support for the amendment comes in the same week that almost 50 backbenche­rs and former Cabinet ministers signed a set of amendments to the Levelling Up Bill which would scrap mandatory local housing targets set by Westminste­r and make them advisory instead – forcing the Government to pull a vote due to take place on Monday.

But some Tories warned that support for the Conservati­ves in the UK could collapse if the Government does not help people on to the housing ladder with a building spree.

Last night Mr Clarke said he was ‘delighted’ to gain the backing of Mr Johnson and Miss Truss ‘together with MPs from right across the Conservati­ve Party, for my amendment to allow onshore wind where (and only where) there is community consent’.

He wrote on Twitter: ‘A progrowth, pro-green policy at a time when we need both.’

Ex- prime minister David Cameron introduced an effective ban on onshore wind farms in 2015. Developers were forced to address all local concerns about a potential farm, and just one person could hold up a project.

 ?? ?? Winds of change: Giant turbines in Northampto­nshire
Winds of change: Giant turbines in Northampto­nshire

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom