Von der Leyen celebrates ‘a great day for Europe’ as farmers trash Brussels
By: Rachel Marsden
Agreement! The European Council delivered on our priorities. Supporting
Ukraine…. A good day for Europe,” tweeted unelected European Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen on Thursday, as EU farmers “high-fived” her by
throwing eggs, lighting fires and dumping manure in Brussels, where a reported
1,300 tractors had gathered in protest.
Surely it must have been in anticipation of this “great day for Europe” that
Brussels rolled out the barbed wire to keep the bloc’s own struggling farmers at
bay while its leaders cut yet another check for Ukraine — after threatening the
one anticipated holdout with national economic “blackmail,” as Hungarian Prime
Minister Viktor Orban qualified it. It’s hard to believe that this meeting
actually took place in Brussels. These officials are so disconnected from
reality that it may as well have been held on a whole other planet.
Unlike the Ukrainian products making their way onto Western European dinner
plates to stick it to Russian President Vladimir Putin (because turtlenecks and
short, cold showers apparently failed to do the job), this crisis is certifiably
EU-made. No one knows this better than the farmers, who also realize that it
makes more sense to blockade the streets of Brussels than the national highways
of their home countries, which they’ve been doing with overwhelming public
support – from nine out of every ten citizens in the case of France, according
to a recent Odoxa poll.
It was the EU with its climate change obsession that imposed a Common
Agricultural Policy on farmers across the entire bloc, managed by bureaucrats
divorced from the reality on the ground. Pencil pushers use EU Copernicus
satellite images to spy and crack down on farmers whose paperwork doesn’t match
– even if any discrepancies can be chalked up to uncontrollable but temporary
conditions like the weather.
It was also the EU that piled on regulations under the pretext of ensuring the
quality of farm products, while at the same time flooding the bloc with grain,
poultry, and other imports from Ukraine. Does “Chernobyl chicken” mass-produced
by workers who are paid a pittance represent a threat to the physical health of
citizens and economic health of farmers? If not, then why can’t Brussels take
its jackboot off the necks of its own farmers so they can compete on a level
playing field? The EU has also suddenly decided to ease up on some pesticide
bans, angering greens. Paris is promoting the idea that ideologically-driven
bans need to end, which seems like a tacit admission of their uselessness. So
what should we be more worried about now – ideologically-driven authoritarianism
under the guise of health consciousness, or an actual health threat?
And what about that Ukrainian grain that EU officials demanded Russia unblock
to feed the poor in developing countries? It turns out that Turkey and Russia
were right when they raised the alarm about it just being dumped right next door
in Europe, and it sounds like Russian President Vladimir Putin was effectively a
bigger defender of EU farmers’ interests than Brussels was. But who’s even
surprised anymore by Brussels’ misplaced priorities, given the image that has
now emerged of another €50 billion ($54 billion) going out the door to Kiev, in
support of a country that’s undercutting the EU’s own farmers without even being
in the EU itself?
It was also the EU that screwed itself, its entire population, industry, and
farmers out of cheap Russian energy, driving inflation that caused consumers to
turn to cheaper food products and, in turn, driving industrial distributors to
buy more cheaply, favoring Ukrainian imports. French President Emmanuel Macron
said that he’d now be merciless with those industrials, as he limbers up to toss
them under the tractors instead of taking responsibility for his own inaction or
blaming Brussels for a top-down anti-Russia policy that’s doing far more harm
than good.
The farmers’ problems are existential. And while some French farming union
chiefs have called for the suspension of blockades in light of the most recent
series of promised reforms announced by Prime Minister Gabriel Attal, it’s not
clear whether the rank and file will actually listen in the long term. These are
people who don’t talk much, but when they do, they’re direct and concrete. As
one farmer told me, “Our feet may be in the dirt, but the dirt is clean” – in
contrast to some politicians who have different narratives depending on their
audience. Even with the suspension of the blockades on Friday, union reps admit
that if government action and implementation doesn’t follow shortly, then the
blowback from the same farmers risks being “catastrophic.”
For many farmers I’ve spoken with, it’s far too little, and way too late. The
average French farmer’s income, estimated by government statistics back in 2021
at around €17,700 a year (for people who regularly work 70 hours a week), has
since been subjected to even more blows. Yet governments have insisted on
milking this particular cow until there’s nothing left. How else to explain the
careless decision to raise taxes on farm fuel by 3 cents a liter, every year,
and the insistence on maintaining such a policy at a time when the price of
energy had skyrocketed as a result of knee-jerk anti-Russian ideological choices
imposed by the EU? Until the tractors spilled onto the highways in France, Paris
showed no interest in reversing this tax policy, which was implemented to drive
the “green transition” away from conventional energy, and against all pragmatic
reality. Clearly French officials knew of its devastating impact, as it was one
of the very first concessions that Attal tried tossing like a speed bump in
front of the advancing tractors on January 26 – and which the farmers rolled
right over, demanding more.
Then there’s Queen Ursula briefly breaking from her fawning over the EU
farmers’ current nemesis, Ukraine, to propose easing their “administrative
burden.” Too bad she didn’t do that before letting Ukraine into the market in
the first place. Guess she could always just blame Putin for making her do it.
The bureaucracy is so overwhelming at this point that her proposal to the
farmers is like offering to save people drowning in the ocean by tossing them a
bucket. She could have stopped the paperwork pile-on at any time, but didn’t.
And how exactly could she know this demagoguery was killing European farming?
You’d think that the first clue would have been the fact that EU policies ended
up strong-arming Dutch farmers to sell their land to the government because
their cattle’s nitrogen emissions exceeded climate policy limits.
Macron has now started to lobby the EU to restrict Ukrainian imports. Wow. You’d
think these tractors were Decepticon Transformers about to rise up and kick
their behinds, the way that all these EU leaders are suddenly springing into
action. But the fact that an elected president even has to go cap in hand to
plead with unelected Brussels bureaucrats, rather than make sovereign decisions
in the best interests of his own country, is pathetic. Like, what if they say
no? Then what? Does Macron think that he’s going to single-handedly and
permanently derail the new Mercosur free trade deal, ready for signature, and
set to flood the EU with even more farm products from Brazil and the rest of
South America?
If Macron, or any other EU leader had any courage, they would have vetoed the
€50 billion for Ukraine and demanded that it be used in consultation with EU
farmers to ease their burden and “unscrew” the bloc. That’s a lot of bought time
for the EU to figure out how to deconstruct the mess that it has made of its own
house through corruption and special interests – all in hope that one day,
people doing honest work can also make a commensurately decent living.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN