The furious farmer taking on Italy’s agri giants
Danilo Calvani leads one of a slew of radical new
movements that are challenging Europe’s established farm unions.
FEBRUARY
14, 2024 6:24 PM CET
BY
ALESSANDRO FORD
https://www.politico.eu/article/furious-farmer-taking-italys-agri-giants/
It’s a dark
winter morning near Rome, but Danilo Calvani is enjoying his moment in the
spotlight.
The
61-year-old lettuce grower should be preparing for spring planting at his
fields in Pontinia, a commune one hour’s drive away. Instead he’s camped
outside the capital, rallying thousands of supporters for a demo on Thursday.
His union, the Betrayed Farmers C.R.A., plans to occupy the Circus Maximus in
their latest protest against the government of Giorgia Meloni.
“Farmers
are being sold out in Italy,” he told POLITICO by phone, lambasting the
country's lawmakers in a thick Romanesco dialect. “There’s a serious risk of
smallholders disappearing from one moment to the next.”
It’s a
familiar worry and one that has rocked the EU in recent months. Farmers across
a dozen countries are blocking highways and ports, cutting off produce supplies
and destroying foreign cargoes. That includes Italy, where tractors have
trundled into cities in a protest against high fuel costs, unfair competition
from imports, and burdensome EU environmental laws.
But inside
the pan-European campaign, the balance of power is shifting. For decades, large
farmers’ unions have dominated the discourse, using thick membership lists to
influence politics. Agriculture ministries are obliged to deal with the German
Farmers’ Association (DBV), France’s FNSEA and Italy’s Coldiretti — if they
don’t want manure dumped on their doorsteps.
Yet as
these organizations increasingly shape policy, they are losing the support of
some members, who see them as part of the very system producers oppose. Leaner,
wilder unions are springing up in response, with more aggressive tactics and
radical messaging. Despite their smaller numbers, it is these populist outfits
who claim to represent Italy’s protesting farmers.
“We have
the most corrupt agricultural unions in Europe and the first in line is
Coldiretti,” thundered Calvani. “They serve their personal interests, align
with multinationals, and make acts and deals to fatten themselves.”
Marchers
affiliated with his Betrayed Farmers C.R.A. — the abbreviation is short for
“Joint Agricultural Committee” — have burned Coldiretti flags at demos and
accuse the union of favoring large landowners over smallholders. Tensions are
running so high that Italian Agriculture Minister Francesco Lollobrigida was
forced to call for calm last month, saying: “It makes no sense for the farmers’
front to become one of fighting other farmers.”
That has
irritated protesters, who cite it as further evidence the government is more
beholden to the established lobby groups than to everyday farmers. Prime
Minister Giorgia Meloni has not helped matters: Last week she invited
representatives from Coldiretti and four other large unions to discuss farmers'
grievances — despite the fact none were leading the protests.
“All those
rebelling are signed up to Coldiretti and other associations,” said Calvani
bitterly. “And what does the government do? Instead of talking to us, they go
speak to the oppressors themselves.”
Blame Brussels
Coldiretti
has struggled to formulate a response, largely keeping silent about the
protests. When it does speak, it deflects blame away from Meloni’s government
and onto the EU, be it over packaging rules, environmental regulations or trade
policy.
“This is
why we have been in Brussels since Tuesday and met the President of the
European Parliament [Roberta] Metsola and Agriculture Commissioner [Janusz
Wojciechowski],” Coldiretti President Ettore Prandini told POLITICO over
WhatsApp. “This is where the protest must be brought.”
Nearly
1,000 Coldiretti members did just that on Feb. 1, flying to Brussels at short
notice to stage a rowdy event in front of the European Parliament at which
farmers toppled a statue and lit bonfires on Place du Luxembourg.
In part,
Coldiretti and the Italian government are victims of their own success. For
years they have peddled misinformation about alternative proteins, such as
insect foods, and lab-grown and plant-based meats, claiming the EU wanted to
force them down Italy’s throat.
Now
protestors are shrilly condemning the Meloni cabinet for not doing more to
protect them from these horrors. It would be comical were it not for the
political implications: Calvani insists he has no electoral ambitions and that
he won’t even vote in June’s European election, but his movement presents a
juicy target for the far right nonetheless.
Matteo
Salvini, the head of Italy's right-wing populist Lega (League), was the first
party leader to visit protesting farmers, declaring that “the League is and
will always be on the side of Italian farmers against the follies chosen in
Brussels.” The Identity and Democracy (ID) political group to which Lega
belongs is predicted to surge to third place in the European Parliament after
the June vote.
Nor is it
just Italy. Germany’s DBV union suffered severe blowback in January after a mob
of angry farmers prevented Economy Minister Robert Habeck from getting off a
ferry at a northern port. DBV President Joachim Rukwied was forced to distance
his association from the attack, which turned out to have been coordinated by
several extreme groups.
In the
Netherlands, the radical Farmers’ Defence Force is increasingly challenging the
country’s traditional union, the LTO. “We've seen an increased fragmentation of
the farmers’ interest representation over the last five years or so,” said
Jeroen Candel, associate professor of food and agriculture policy at Wageningen
University.
“Traditionally
LTO always had to balance between all regions of the Netherlands,” he told
POLITICO, whereas the Farmers’ Defence Force has “close ties to the extreme
right.” The group is infamous for physically intimidating rival farmers and
politicians, leading even the most pro-farmer party — the Farmer-Citizen
Movement (BBB) — to call them out recently.
All the
same, their popularity remains high in some areas, as many farmers don’t “feel
represented by LTO anymore,” Candel said.
Even
France’s FNSEA — the continent’s most powerful national farming union — has
wobbled. When grassroots strikes began in January, FNSEA bosses appeared
uncertain; one representative in Toulouse who told protesters to go home was
booed off stage. After that, the lobby cheered on the blockades, only asking
farmers to suspend them in February.
“It’s
happening across Europe,” Calvani warned. “Our battle isn’t just against the
career politicians, but the agricultural unions as well.”
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