Frustrated farmers slam EU ‘technocrats’ who
‘call the shots’ in Brussels protest
Dozens of farmers protest in front of the European
Parliament as demonstrations grow across the continent.
JANUARY 24,
2024 5:40 PM CET
BY NICOLAS
CAMUT
https://www.politico.eu/article/european-parliament-eu-farmers-protest-fizzles-brussels/
BRUSSELS —
Benoît Laqueue was one of 100 disgruntled French farmers on a bus headed for
the European Parliament before sunrise on Wednesday.
The
58-year-old cattle and cereal farmer from the rural Ardennes region, in
northeastern France, came with a message for the “technocrats” who “call the
shots” in the European Union.
“Leave us
alone, let us work in peace!” said Laqueue, who wore a yellow beanie matching
the flag he was carrying, which bears the colors of the second-largest French
farmers’ union, Rural Coordination.
The
Frenchman, who runs a family farm together with his wife and son, says he is
burdened with administrative work and over-regulation from the EU, while
suffering from competition from foreign countries with lower prices and looser
environmental rules — including Ukraine. Thousands of farmers across Europe
have taken to the streets in recent weeks, claiming they are being
disproportionately affected by the EU’s efforts to slash greenhouse gas
emissions, and demanding more financial support from their governments.
“They’re
not in [the EU], they’re exporting to us tax-free … they’ve taken markets away
from us, and they’re not producing with the same rules as we are!” Laqueue
said.
In Poland
and Romania, farmers and truckers have blockaded roads in protest against
Brussels’ decision to suspend import duties on Ukrainian goods following
Moscow’s full-scale invasion, which they see as unfair competition.
Demonstrations
have also sprung up in Germany against a government proposal to remove tax
privileges, while French farmers have been protesting against taxes on tractor
fuel and overregulation.
In both
countries, protests have been co-opted by far-right movements seeking to use
the farmers’ discontent for political gain ahead of the European election in
June.
The
Brussels protest was no exception, and was joined by Marion Maréchal, the niece
of Marine Le Pen and also the lead candidate of the French far-right Reconquête
party — founded by anti-immigration firebrand Éric Zemmour.
Speaking to
reporters on the muddy Place du Luxembourg, Maréchal denied she was attempting
to “surf on the wave” of the farmers’ anger.
“I feel
concerned because it’s about our sovereignty,” Maréchal said, calling for a
“change of the European Parliament’s political line on both foreign policy and
this punitive ecology.”
Asked by
POLITICO about their political leanings, most farmers claimed to be apolitical.
“We’re
talking to everyone” no matter the party, said Jean-François Chaperon, a
58-year-old farmer from the southern Hérault area.
Wout van
Looveren, a 25-year-old cow farmer from Belgium’s Flanders region, said he felt
“politically homeless.”
“There is
not one political party that’s coming on for our rights,” he said.
Laqueue,
the French farmer from the Ardennes region, said it didn’t matter which
politicians are in charge because “they’re not the ones who call the shots, the
technocrats are.”
In an
exchange with Maréchal, the French farmer later echoed some of the far-right's
talking points on immigration as he referred to an accident in southwestern
France in which two people were killed after a car hit a roadblock set up by
farmers.
Noting that
the car’s three occupants were under deportation orders from France, as
reported by French media, Laqueue said: “The three … shouldn’t have been here.
And that family shouldn't have been in mourning.”
“You’re
right, that’s factual,” Maréchal answered.


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