The posts are on this blog where I stated that Labour leader Keir Starmer and Steve Reed MP had secret talks with farmers and that a deal was done regarding the unscientific badger culling.
Another 10,000 badgers would push the total so far to over 310,000 badgers slaughtered. Keir Starmer, Steve Reed (who will NOT discuss the cull), DEFRA and Natural England have guaranteed that the badger population will drop to such a level that by 2030 they will be extinct in most areas. Political deals count for more than saving a species that has faced (even as a protected species) near extinction before and endured much cruelty will become, as a 'protected' species extinct.
Hedgehogs are still declining. The fox population is dropping as drastically and badgers will complete the trio of species that will fall over the edge into extinction by the 2030s.
Remember those responsible: Keir Starmer MP. Steve Reed MP. Natural England and DEFRA.
Protect The Wild posted this under the title REVEALED: Government discusses badger cull with farming lobbyists in off-the-record meetings
Following Labour's general election victory in 2024, Keir Starmer said "the fight for trust is the battle that defines our political era." However, new Freedom of Information revelations related to the badger cull show that his government is doing little in practice to earn the trust of the British people.
Protect the Wild submitted a Freedom of Information request to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) in early January. We asked for information on meetings between ministers and representatives of the farming industry in which the badger cull was discussed since the Labour government took office.
In response to the request, DEFRA confirmed that the badger cull was a topic of discussion during three ministerial meetings with representatives of the farming industry that occurred between July 2024 and early January. However, the department did not provide the minutes of those meetings, nor the names of officials who were present, as requested. DEFRA said it could not provide these details because "no formal minutes were taken" at the meetings.
In other words, the meetings were effectively off the record. This means that whatever was said about the badger cull in those discussions between public servants and industry players will remain hidden from public view and scrutiny.
Protect the Wild also asked DEFRA for the list of farmers, vets, scientists, and conservationists, that it has engaged to co-design its new bovine tuberculosis (bTB) eradication strategy. This is a strategy announced by DEFRA last August that food security and rural affairs minister, Daniel Zeichner, said would ultimately "allow" the government to end the badger cull and "stop the spread of this horrific disease."
In its FOI response, DEFRA said it is forming a steering group from the existing Bovine Tuberculosis Partnership to take the strategy co-designing forward. Work is still underway to complete the full list of stakeholders who will work on the strategy, so DEFRA would not disclose any further information on the basis that "the information requested is still incomplete and subject to further adjustments before it is finalised." Once complete, the list of involved parties will be published on the government's Bovine TB Partnership page, the department said.
The Bovine Tuberculosis Partnership is a group of stakeholders, such farmers and veterinarians, that works on solutions to bTB. It has faced criticism, including from former members, for being a closed shop that has failed to come up with realistic and meaningful solutions.
Lack of transparency
DEFRA's FOI response to Protect the Wild is similar to its response to another request regarding water companies last year. The Good Law Project sent an FOI request to DEFRA in September asking for information about meetings – including minutes – between ministers and representatives of water companies since Labour took office. DEFRA confirmed that nine meetings had taken place but said "we do not hold any minutes of the meetings you have asked about."
This lack of transparency from the government is deeply troubling. As the Good Law Project's Tamara Walters put it, "If ministers talk to big business, we need to know what they’re saying" to understand in whose interests officials are working.
This transparency is particularly important when the government is not living up to the expectations of the public, as is the case with the sewage scandal and the badger cull.
Starmer's government came to power promising 'change' on multiple issues. The badger cull was among them, with Labour branding the over a decade-long massacre of badgers as "ineffective" and pledging to end the cull.
But rather than ending the massacre, the Labour government has extended it by approving a whole new cull in Cumbria. On its watch, the cull licensing authority – Natural England – also authorised licences in late 2024 which allowed for the killing of over 10,000 badgers in intensive culls.
Although the government has announced some welcome changes to the status quo on the badger cull issue, such as scrapping an inherited plan for further potentially large-scale killing of the iconic mammal through 'targeted' culling, the fact remains that badgers continue to be massacred under this government in the name of tackling bTB in cows. Indeed, the government's current plans allow for culling to potentially continue up to 2029.
Significant access
Farming lobbyists have made no secret of wanting the cull to continue under the Labour government. In July last year, the National Farmers' Union president, Tom Bradshaw, spoke at a farming show in Wales. During the event, he said it would be a "tragedy" if the Labour government ended the badger cull sooner rather than later.
According to the NFU, Bradshaw was "first through the doors" for a meeting with the DEFRA secretary, Steve Reed, after Starmer appointed Reed to the position in July 2024. Bradshaw met with Reed just 72 hours after he was named DEFRA secretary. This was not the first time the two individuals had a face-to-face, as Bradshaw met with Reed in February that year when Reed was shadow DEFRA secretary.
At an NFU reception in Westminster in September, meanwhile, Reed thanked the NFU for its support for all parties during the election. He explained:
"I was all over the country being taken on visits around farms of every shape and variety and I was blown away by the quality of support we were shown."
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