24/01/24View in Browser

Farmers and politics: Time for choices

By Angelo Di Mambro | @angelodimambro

Farmers taking to the streets are making headlines all over Europe, and this is not their first season of discontent.

Since autumn 2019, except for a break during the pandemic, farmers have been rallying for different reasons almost yearly. 

According to the maths done by the think tank Farm Europe, since the farm discontent broke out in the Netherlands more than a year ago, large-scale protests have taken place in more than 15 member states. 

Most of them were invisible beyond the sector and at the EU level. But this time, in the year of probably the most important European election in decades, it’s different. 

Let’s do some more math. 

In the EU, there are nine million farms, some 90% of which are family farms. A conservative estimate of three voters per family translates into 27-30 million potential voters, a considerable electoral pool.

And that’s why farmer discontent is making headlines.

The first to understand this potential was the European People’s Party. Since the victory of the rural party BBB in the Dutch local elections in March 2023, the EPP has tried hard to brand itself as “the farmers’ party”. 

But it’s not an isolated case.

Continue reading...
Photo of the day

Members of Turkish parliament attend session before voting on a bill regarding Sweden's accession to NATO, at the Grand National Assembly of Turkey (TBMM) in Ankara, Turkey, 23 January 2024. Turkey’s Parliament, where President Tayyip Erdogan's AK Party and allies hold a majority, will vote on Sweden's NATO bid. EPA-EFE/NECATI SAVAS

Today's edition is powered by the Flemish Government

Flanders Shaping the EU Presidency

Within the EU presidency, Flanders takes on an important role as president for matters regarding Industry, Youth, Culture, Media and Fisheries. It is also hosting numerous events. 

Learn more about how Flanders is shaping the EU presidency.

 
Would you like to sponsor The Brief? Contact us
The Roundup

Elections across the globe this year will be a “prime target” for countries looking to spread disinformation and undermine democracy, such as Russia, EU chief diplomat Josep Borrell warned on Tuesday.

French MEP Valérie Hayer will become the new president of Renew Europe after current interim President Malik Azamni failed to gather enough support following widespread worries about his party’s involvement in coalition talks with the far-right in the Netherlands, Euractiv has learnt.

Lack of enthusiasm among national members of the European Left is driving the party to pick a widely unknown politician for its lead candidate in EU elections, echoing a general lack of appetite for the contested Spitzenkandidaten system.

The awaited proposal of the Commission on prolonging food trade benefits for Ukraine, will include some Warsaw demands as farmer protests pushed the EU to take a softer stance, Polish Agriculture Minister Czesław Siekierski told Euractiv.

As a coalition of European Union member states call for public debate on lab-grown meat, the European Commissioner for Food and Health Safety, Stella Kyriakides, responded that current EU rules are solid when it comes to assessing the risk and labelling of cell-based foods.

Before the ministry was disbanded in the latest government reshuffle, former French energy minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher was preparing a joint paper to be co-signed by her German counterpart as a show of conciliation ahead of the EU elections – though whether the paper will now ever see the light is unclear.

Ahead of a key summit of members of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in Abu Dhabi at the end of February, the EU hopes to reform the organisation’s “dispute settlement mechanism”, a court-like institution paralysed by the USA.

The Party of European Socialists wants the EU to “strengthen” relations with both Washington and Beijing, but rejects a regulatory “pause” to the Green Deal, a demand of other pro-EU forces such as the centre-right and liberals, an early draft electoral manifesto, seen by Euractiv, states.

Finally, for more policy news, check out this week’s editions of the Green Brief and the Health Brief.

Look out for….

  • Informal meeting of justice and home affairs ministers, Wednesday-Friday.
  • Commission Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič participates in high-level event on future of automotive and battery industry in Bratislava on Thursday.
  • Commission Vice-President Vĕra Jourová speaks at US–EU Media Freedom Conference in Brussels on Thursday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

Twitter
Instagram
Facebook
Website
LinkedIn
Spotify
YouTube
Copyright © 2024 Euractiv Media BV, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to receive email newsletters from Euractiv.

Our mailing address is:
Euractiv Media BV
Karel de Grotelaan 1 bus 1
Brussel 1041
Belgium

Add us to your address book


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from ALL emails from us.