As 10,000 farmers descended on Brussels with 500 tractors on December 18, 2025, to protest the EU-Mercosur trade deal, the demonstrations underscored a broader crisis facing European agriculture, with parallels in the UK where Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government faces mounting backlash over inheritance tax reforms. The Brussels rally, organized by farmers from all 27 EU countries, turned chaotic as protesters clashed with police, who deployed tear gas amid thrown potatoes and eggs. The event highlights escalating tensions over policies that farmers say threaten their livelihoods, from cheap imports to Net Zero mandates imposing heavy costs.

In Brussels, the anger centers on the EU-Mercosur pact with South American nations, which critics argue will flood markets with lower-standard beef and poultry, undercutting local producers. “Westminster heard farmers loud and clear on December 16,” echoed UK sentiments, where similar protests against Labour’s inheritance tax raid on family farms have forced concessions. The government raised the relief threshold from £1 million to £2.5 million on December 23, 2025, after NFU president Tom Bradshaw warned of suicidal ideation among farmers. Starmer told MPs he recognizes the distress, backtracking amid revolt.

The Net Zero push exacerbates the strain. EU emissions targets require costly transitions—electric machinery, reduced fertilizer use—that small farms can’t afford. In the UK, Starmer’s administration recommitted to £28 billion in green infrastructure, but farmers argue it ignores agriculture’s realities. “Another farmer gone,” lamented one Brussels sign, referencing suicides linked to economic pressure.

Taxes compound the issue. UK’s inheritance tax changes were labeled “eye of the storm” by Bradshaw, risking family farms’ viability. EU subsidies cuts and import duties reductions threaten bankruptcy. “Labour backtracks after farmers revolt,” headlines noted, but damage lingers.

Immigration ties in indirectly: labor shortages from post-Brexit rules force reliance on foreign workers, but costs rise amid “red carpet” policies for skilled migrants, sidelining locals. A £15 billion “Ford collapse” reference seems misplaced—perhaps alluding to automotive sector woes from Net Zero, like Ford’s UK plant closures costing jobs—but farmers feel similarly squeezed.

BBC coverage has drawn “propaganda” accusations, with some claiming biased reporting downplays protests. “Starmer faces the Liaison Committee but loses face,” quipped critics.

As Brussels burns metaphorically with farmer fury, Starmer’s silence on EU parallels is deafening. The elite’s “war on farmers”? Rhetoric escalates, but the crisis is real—food security at stake. Governments must listen before it’s too late.