The Mail on Sunday

RSPCA attacks Liz Truss’s food trade panel as a ‘Trojan horse’

- By Max Aitchison

THE UK’s largest animal welfare charity has warned that the new Trade and Agricultur­e Commission is a ‘ Trojan horse’ that risks underminin­g the nation’s world-leading farm and food standards.

Giving its backing to The Mail on Sunday’s Save Our Family Farms campaign, the RSPCA criticised the Government’s failure to guarantee that the UK’s tough welfare and environmen­tal practices would be enshrined in a future post-Brexit trade deal with the US.

It also attacked the new commission – set up by Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liz Truss to tackle concerns that a deal with America could allow inferior products to flood Britain – for being a ‘Trojan horse which fails to fulfil the Government’s manifesto promises to protect welfare standards’.

Announcing details of the commission, whose members are drawn from industry and farming bodies, Ms Truss last week insisted that she was ‘putting British farming first’ and that ‘our high food and animal welfare standards won’t be compromise­d’.

But the RSPCA criticised Ms Truss for failing to appoint a single representa­tive from the animal welfare sector on the 16-member board. RSPCA chief executive Chris Sherwood said: ‘ Our real concern is that the commission is going to be a Trojan horse for deregulati­ng and reducing our outstandin­g farm welfare standards.’

While Mr Sherwood welcomed the independen­ce of Tim Smith – a former Food Standards Agency boss who has been named as the commission’s chairman – he questioned whether the panel would have teeth, given that its findings will only be advisory.

‘When the commission publishes its report, Parliament needs to have the opportunit­y for transparen­t debate on its recommenda­tions and the ability to pass a binding resolution,’ said Mr Sherwood.

‘We don’t want this to be something where the report gets buried or is kicked into the proverbial long grass. Instead, we want to see a cast iron, legal guarantee in the Agricultur­al Bill that our animal welfare standards will be protected in future free trade deals.

‘We want to see the UK exporting our leading farm and animal welfare standards around the world – championin­g our high standards and ensuring that food coming into the UK, which is unlawful to produce here, is not allowed in.’

Mr Sherwood said the Conservati­ve Party made a manifesto pledge before last year’s Election to protect animal welfare standards.

Ministers insist they will not undermine UK standards in any future trade deal but farmers and campaigner­s were left furious in May when a bid to enshrine the promise into law as part of the new

Agricultur­al Bill was defeated. There are also fears that farmers will be undercut by low- quality imports from countries which have weaker welfare standards.

Mr Sherwood warned this could result in a flood of chlorinate­d chicken, hormone-fed beef, pork produced from sow-stall systems, and egg products from hens in battery cages.

‘The reason why chlorine is used is because chickens are kept in such filthy conditions and their waste isn’t removed after they are slaughtere­d,’ he said. ‘ That wouldn’t happen here because of our animal welfare rules.’

Environmen­t Secretary George Eustice has previously called animal welfare l aw i n the US ‘woefully deficient’.

The RSPCA will support the Commission, but Mr Sherwood urged the Government to go further by amending the Agricultur­al

Bill to enshrine their commitment to our animal welfare standards.

‘Without this clear, legal protection, the Government is leaving the door open to rolling back on these promises and negotiatin­g away these crucial protection­s,’ he said.

‘Brexit presents an opportunit­y: to protect our farm animals and protect British farmers, making Britain a beacon for higher welfare production, and we urge the Government to grasp this.

‘This stuff really matters. Agricultur­al Bills only get passed very rarely because they take an awful lot of parliament­ary time. This Bill could be our legislatio­n for the next ten to 20 years. This is about futureproo­fing farm animal welfare standards and ensuring that they’re safeguarde­d for a generation.’

The RSPCA’s interventi­on came as Mr Smith called for ‘cool heads and thoughtful discussion’.

Calling for ‘an internatio­nal coalition that helps advance higher animal welfare standards across the world’, he expressed hope that the UK’s ‘ world- leading’ animal welfare standards could influence World Trade Organisati­on policy.

However, he failed to rule out chlorinate­d chicken and hormonefed beef being allowed into the UK as part of a US trade deal.

‘We don’t want findings kicked into the long grass’

 ??  ?? HORSING AROUND: Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liz Truss gets up close with a foal during a farm visit
HORSING AROUND: Internatio­nal Trade Secretary Liz Truss gets up close with a foal during a farm visit

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