Farmers will stage another tractor protest outside Parliament on Monday as they continue their campaign against changes to inheritance tax rules.
The tractor rally, organised by Save British Farming, comes as MPs debate an e-petition with more than 148,000 signatures calling to keep the current inheritance tax exemptions for working farms.
Labour has insisted it will not make a U-turn on its plans to introduce a 20% inheritance tax rate on farms worth more than £1 million.
The changes announced in the Budget are due to come into force in April 2026 and scrap an exemption which meant no inheritance tax was paid to pass down family farms.
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Reform UK leader Nigel Farage is expected to address farmers making a pit stop on their way into London on Monday morning.
The Government said in its response to the petition that its commitment to farmers is “steadfast” but that there is an “urgent need to repair the public finances in as fair a way as possible.”
“The reform of the reliefs strikes the right balance,” it said.
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The National Farmers Union, which has organised previous protests, said it supported any of its members taking part.
NFU President Tom Bradshaw said: “The strength of feeling around the proposed family farm tax is still incredibly high.
“We support any members who want to take part in other respectful and lawful demonstrations which work towards our aim to stop the family farm tax.”
The NFU has previously warned that many farmers were at “breaking point” and could not afford increased bills.
A petition signed by more than 270,000 members of the public was handed in to 10 Downing Street last month by NFU president Tom Bradshaw and NFU Cymru president Aled Jones, urging the Government to ditch what they described as the “devastating family farm tax”.
Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber, TV personality Jeremy Clarkson and leading politicians Kemi Badenoch, Sir Ed Davey and Mr Farage are among the well-known figures backing the campaign.