The coronavirus crisis means that business as usual
is no longer an option. Business as usual wasn’t working.
Brexit, coronavirus and the climate emergency demand a
very different approach. For me in my role as Shadow
Environment Secretary, that means getting Labour’s
message heard loud and clear in our coastal and rural
communities.
My first priority is to support and rebuild our
food sector after this crisis. Coronavirus has exposed
the fragility of our food supply chains. We’ve seen
supermarket shelves left bare, while millions of pints of
milk have just been thrown away and fishers have found
themselves on the brink of bankruptcy.
The government’s plan for a volunteer land army to
fill the gaping holes in our agricultural work force has
left a lot to be desired. We need to take action to make
our food supplies more resilient – but the focus here has
to be making sure that every single one of us has enough
to eat. The Food Foundation finding that 1.5 million
people had gone a whole day without eating since the
lockdown began – and that’s why I proposed the creation
of a Coronavirus Emergency Food Plan. There is more than
enough food for everyone to eat three nutritious meals a
day: this is not a crisis of food supply, but a crisis of
poverty.
We still need to solve a whole host of problems for
food, farming and fishing that Brexit has thrown up. I
want to see a Britain that is a world leader in high food
quality and animal welfare standards. But the
government’s lack of leadership on this risks trading
away these British standards in a race to the bottom to
get a deal with Donald Trump. We can’t allow Britain’s
hardworking farmers to be undercut by cheap, low-quality
imports from abroad, which will devastate our domestic
food production – and we need them getting food on our
plates now more than ever.
The truth is that Britain’s rural communities have
been ignored and taken for granted for too long. That
must change. Huge numbers of Labour’s target seats now
include rural and coastal communities. Austerity has hit
these communities hard – unable to access education,
affordable housing, proper broadband or decent public
transport. The lack of opportunity is pushing more and
more people into poverty, and accessing support is nearly
impossible. Those communities share their values with
Labour and reconnecting must be a priority. We start by
listening, building confidence in our approach and
details to our policies.
We need to present a vision for the future to our
rural and coastal communities, not just technical
solutions. Labour is not short on good technical policies
for fishing and farming. On a simple comparison, our
policies fit those communities better than those proposed
by the Tories, especially those that have a Brexit
impact. Fishing and farming are identity issues too, and
Labour needs to speak for those communities for whom
growing crops, rearing animals and fishing our waters are
part of who they are. As a West Country lad representing
a coastal city, I know what this means and I know why it
matters.
DEFRA is a department whose time has come. For the
past decade, it has been technically managing hugely
important parts of our daily lives: the air we breathe,
the food we eat and the water we drink. But the truth is
that the virus, Brexit and the climate emergency means
these fundamentals need addressing with new energy, new
focus and new policy. I’m proud to have a broad shadow
team in , , , , Lord John Granchester and Baroness Maggie
Jones. There’s a Labour case to be made for Defra: red on
the outside, green on the inside.