Brexit and the coming food crisis: ‘If you can’t feed a country, you haven’t got a country’ – The Guardian
On 24 June last year, the few hundred residents of a temporary village, hidden from view in the middle of a West Sussex soft fruit farm, received letters. They were signed by David Kay, the managing director of the Hall Hunter Partnership, a business that grows 10% of the UKs strawberries, 19% of its raspberries and a whacking 42% of its blueberries across thousands of acres, of both glasshouses and polytunnels. The recipients were his seasonal workforce, some of the 3,000 pickers from Bulgaria, Romania and elsewhere who come here each year to get the harvest in, and without whom the business would simply not exist.
I wanted them to know that in the face of the vote for Brexit we would hang together as a family, he says now, standing amid the mobile homes his workers live in during the summer months. The dwellings come dressed with satellite dishes pointed at news channels in Bulgaria, and pylons delivering high-speed wifi. Some have planted gardens. Tesco Direct delivers their groceries; coaches take them out on excursions.Im responsible for both a fruit farm and 2,100 beds, Kay says. That morning I met a lot of very sad and confused workers. For me, personally, it was a shock.
Kay may have wanted to reassure his employees in the immediate aftermath of the vote, but 11 months on their status is no clearer. Indeed, this tidy little village could now stand as a blunt symbol for one of the most serious but little talked about issues arising from the Brexit negotiations: the continued ability of this country to feed itself, if the deal goes wrong. Opponents of EU membership talked during the referendum campaign about sovereignty and control. They railed against the free movement of labour. What they didnt mention is the way the British food supply chain has, over the past 30 years, become increasingly reliant on workers from elsewhere, both permanent residents and seasonal labour.
Last month, as parliament wrapped up for the general election, the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee quietly published a short paper called Feeding the Nation: Labour Constraints. As it reported, around 20% of all employees in British agriculture come from abroad, these days mostly Romania and Bulgaria, while 63% of all staff employed by members of the British Meat Processors Association are not from the UK. Around 400,000 people work in food manufacturing here, and more than 30% of those are also from somewhere else. If free movement of labour stops, the British food industry wont just face difficulties. Some parts will shudder to a halt. Shelves will be emptied. Prices will shoot up. And right now, none of those charged with negotiating Britains exit from the EU are making promises that this scenario will be averted. Many of them arent even engaging with the issue.
The soft-fruit business of which Hall Hunter is a part is right at the sharp end of that. From February to November we need 29,000 seasonal workers across the sector, says Laurence Olins, chair of British Summer Fruits, the crop association for berries, which account for one in every 5 spent on fruit in the UK. And 95% of those are non-UK EU citizens. The industry has tried to get UK nationals to do the work but theyre simply not interested. Our hope is for some sort of permit scheme, Olins says. But if, say, we get only half the permits we need, we will simply have only half the size of the industry. The 29,000 non-UK workers they have are therefore vital. And, whats more, the number required is growing.
Kay agrees. Weve worked with job centres and with ex-prisoners, but British people dont want to do these jobs. Instead, he says, he gets a steady supply of highly educated and motivated eastern Europeans, most of whom have some connection to farming because their families still have smallholdings. We have a return rate of 76% each year, he says, which means we retain a skills base 70% of our management arrived here as pickers and worked their way up the ranks. He shows me a list of the 20 most important people in the company and its littered with Slavic surnames 20 nationalities are represented on site.
Some have settled here, put their kids into schools and taken UK citizenship. But many more are just seasonal, coming and going at short notice. Every single one is interviewed for a job by a member of Kays team; they run temporary recruitment centres in town halls and civic libraries across eastern Europe.
At the farm, amid glasshouses of glossy strawberries planted at shoulder height for easy picking, I meet Zyulfie Yusein, 29, and Nikoloy Kolev, 34. Both are from Bulgaria. Both are graduates. Both first came here to earn a little money as students, returning home with their earnings. Over the years, theyve stayed longer and longer. Its a great job, says Yusein. Kolev agrees. We work as a team and the team is like family. But both say the Brexit vote has changed everything. I worry about the future, Yusein says. My friends worry too. The vote made me feel unsafe. Kolev says, Going back is not an option but what am I going to do? They are warm, bright, friendly people, but the tension just beneath the surface is palpable. They are already experiencing the downside. The Brexit vote has weakened the pound by up to 20%. Their salaries are worth far less at home than once they were.
And the message is getting back to their friends. Some of the seasonal labour is choosing not to come to the UK because of the value of sterling, Olins says. If you can go to work in a Euro country like Spain, rather than Britain, its worth doing so.There used to be 10 applicants for every picking job in the UK. Now there are three. The candidates were getting are older, they have fewer skills, their English is worse. Is that just down to Brexit? The media in the home countries has been reporting attacks on immigrants to the UK, he says. The mood here has changed. And it risks imperilling the harvest British citizens dont want to help bring in.
On 26 July, 2016, a little over a month after the referendum vote, representatives of more than 40 food and drink associations gathered in the meeting room on the sixth floor of the Food and Drink Federations HQ on Londons Bloomsbury Way. Here were representatives of the British Poultry Council and the Federation of Bakers, the British Growers Association, the National Association of Cider Makers and many more besides. They were joined by civil servants from Defra, the Food Standards Agency, the Department for Business, David Daviss Brexit department and HMRC. The meeting had been called by Ian Wright, a former executive at drinks company Diageo who now heads the Food and Drink Federation. The meeting was to coordinate a response to Brexit. And top of the agenda was the issue of labour. The same group has met every month since.
Weve worked with job centres and with ex-prisoners, but British people dont want to do these jobs
Its fair to say that we started out with a degree of surprise at all levels, Wright says. Very few ministers or civil servants understood the nature of the food-chain workforce. He believes they have managed to get the message across, but thats a very different thing to dealing with the issue, given the refusal by Downing Street to be drawn on their negotiating positions. Right now, theres a great deal of work going on to define the choices the prime minister will have to take to sustain the variety and complexity of the food supply chain. The alternative, he says, is fewer choices for consumers or sources of labour from outside the EU.
Early in this election campaign Labours Brexit spokesman, Keir Starmer, made a commitment to guarantee the rights of the estimated 3.9 million EU citizens living in the UK on day one of a Labour government. David Davis met this with a soothing assertion of a swift deal to secure those rights. Thats not surprising. The non-UK citizens here are mostly of working age and economically active. The 900,000 UK citizens in Europe are mostly pensioners living out their retirement on the sun belt in increasingly poor health. Theresa Mays government is desperate not to have them sent back for fear of the pressure they will place on the NHS.
But what matters is not those living here full-time but the seasonal workforce that comes and goes. Until 2013, there was a seasonal-labour permit scheme which, ironically, was abolished, because the EU free movement system was deemed to be working so well. A replacement would be needed. Pushed for a number of permits required, Wright suggests around half a million. Hard-line Brexiters, committed to an end to the free movement of labour, might well find this unpalatable. Indeed, one of the big food-sector bodies told me they received off-the-record calls from civil servants warning them to shut up, because they had been quoted in newspapers talking about the seriousness of the labour supply to the food chain. We were told we would just enrage the hard-line Brexiteers, a member of the body told me.
The problem is compounded because some sectors need a huge mass of workers. Others need very few. In some areas of the food chain, it can be down to just a few dozen people who keep the whole thing running. For example, under Food Standards Agency rules, an abattoir in England, Wales or Northern Ireland cannot operate unless the animals on the way to slaughter are overseen by one of their vets. This is work British vets dont want to do. They would rather be out on the farm with livestock in the prime of their lives, or dealing with domestic pets. As a result, at least 85% of vets in British abattoirs are not from the UK. Apparently, the majority are Spanish. And if they couldnt get into the country to do the job, the meat supply chain would collapse.
While Ian Wright is good at the diplomatic phrase, others feel less constrained. In the months running up to the Brexit referendum, Tim Lang, professor of food policy at Londons City University, co-authored a briefing paper on Britains dependency on EU member states for its food. It dealt in detail with seasonal labour from the EU. He can be forgiven for wondering why he bothered. The civil service is dispirited and uncertain of what theyre doing because they havent been given any signals, Lang says now. Theres not a bleep about food policy coming from ministers. There has been a stunning silence from Andrea Leadsom, the Defra minister, on this matter of national importance. Basically, if on March 31, 2019, migrant labour is not sorted the food system is fucked. And then he says, I hope those who voted Brexit and who still want to eat British are prepared to go to Lincolnshire in winter to pick vegetables. Or as Wright puts it, Food is at the heart of national security. If you cant feed a country you havent got a country.
For five years as a food reporter for the BBCs One Show, I used to travel the country from one strip-lit food production unit to another, looking at exactly where our food came from. The ethnic mix was always striking. The media were forever talking about a British food revolution; of a homegrown improvement in quality at both small and large scale. And the companies were indeed British, but so many of the people doing the actual producing were not. I visited cake factories where the health and safety notices were in both English and Polish; was given tours of vegetable processing plants where the floor managers needed a smattering of four eastern European languages to get by.
I take a train north from Hall Hunters fruit farm, to the North Yorkshire home of Heck Sausages, run by Debbie and Andrew Keeble. In just four years their innovative range of gluten-free sausages from pork and apple, through square to non-meat alternatives has been stocked by all the major supermarkets. Their turnover is projected to reach 18m this year and they are about to move into a new plant which will enable them to run multiple production lines.
The only issue is workforce, which will have to double. Of the 60 people currently working in production, 85% are from eastern Europe; like Hall Hunter, Heck cant get British people to do the work. I ask Debbie Keeble what an end to free movement of labour would mean to her business. It would be cataclysmic, she says. No one here will take these jobs. The Heck factory is in an area that voted strongly for Brexit. During the referendum, campaigners were going on about people coming over here taking our jobs. Well, theyre not, because nobody here applies for them.
Mostly she says its word of mouth, with new employees coming either directly from Latvia or Romania or from within the communities in the UK. I talk to one young Romanian woman, Georgeta Iclodean, who talks about getting increasing amounts of hassle from Border Agency officials when she re-enters Britain. I make sure to have all my papers with me now, she says.
I meet 34-year-old Vladim Protasovs from Latvia who came to Heck in 2014 and has risen to be one of the line managers. I like working in the UK, he says. Its a very big difference from Latvia. But Brexit has changed everything. My children are settled in school here, he says. If we had to go back it would be so hard, not just for me but for them. Theres lot of people who want to come from Latvia to work in the UK, but they are worried. I call my friends to say there are jobs but they dont want to come.
Then he says: What happens next? Its a good question. The truth is nobody knows, not the business leaders, not the diplomats and certainly not the politicians. The prime minister and her team have portrayed negotiations as a game of poker, used the language of hands unrevealed and bluffs, while failing to recognise that the analogy doesnt work; poker is a winner-takes-all game and Britain cannot afford to lose everything.
The Brexit deal isnt just about vague concepts of nationhood. It isnt simply about international standing or the ebb and flow of trade.Its about the lives of individual people like Protasovs and Iclodean, Yusein and Kolev; the ones prepared to do the back-breaking jobs British people are not. Whats more, this is not just their crisis, to be worked out in anguished letters home. Its ours too. Because without them and the half a million seasonal workers like them, our very ability to feed ourselves, at a price we can all afford, is in peril. In the forthcoming Brexit negotiations that is whats really at stake.
See original here:
Brexit and the coming food crisis: 'If you can't feed a country, you haven't got a country' - The Guardian
- Gateway of Europe The Migrant Crisis: DocuBays hard-hitting new original Is now streaming - Adgully.com - June 24th, 2025 [June 24th, 2025]
- Now Streaming on DocuBay: Gateway of Europe The Migrant Crisis - Passionate In Marketing - June 24th, 2025 [June 24th, 2025]
- Reform UK threatens 'day of reckoning' over migrant crisis as 'laughing' French police oversee 'disgraceful invasion' - GB News - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Gateway of Europe The Migrant Crisis reflects on the challenges faced by migrant - Social News XYZ - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- DocuBay unveils trailer for Original Gateway of Europe: The Migrant Crisis - Adgully.com - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- DocuBay Announces its Next Original Documentary - Gateway of Europe - The Migrant Crisis - Streaming Exclusively on June 20 - The Tribune - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Docubay Unveils Trailer Of Its Powerful New Original gateway Of Europe The Migrant Crisis - Passionate In Marketing - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- The British state is hiding information about the migrant crisis from YOU, says Matt Goodwin - GB News - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- True scale of Britain's migrant hotel crisis EXPOSED as petition to halt asylum spend hits 300,000 - GB News - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- 'Elite mindset' and left-wing opinion fuelling migrant crisis says Nick Ferrari as he slams the government - lbc.co.uk - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- Well never weather the migrant crisis without a new excuse - The Times - June 4th, 2025 [June 4th, 2025]
- Ex-border chief delivers 'very easy solution' to solve migrant crisis in UK: 'I need them to listen!' - GB News - June 4th, 2025 [June 4th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Heidi Alexander grilled by GB News host on Labour's record figures - 'The numbers were coming down!' - GB News - June 4th, 2025 [June 4th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Britain faces drinking water shortages in just TEN years due to mass immigration - GB News - June 1st, 2025 [June 1st, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Mark White explains why net migration halving is NOT a win for Labour - 'It would be wrong' - GB News - May 28th, 2025 [May 28th, 2025]
- Fury as Keir Starmer fails to vote to end migrant crisis 'can't be bothered!' - Daily Express - May 15th, 2025 [May 15th, 2025]
- The French have 'allowed the migrant crisis to happen', Armstrong claims - GB News - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- 'Exodus' warning as Yvette Cooper blames business for migrant crisis - Daily Express - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Michelle Dewberry erupts over Britain's 'direction of travel' with taxpayers set to shell out for rent - GB News - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- 'Labour want to reimpose free movement by stealth and make the migrant crisis worse' - GB News - April 30th, 2025 [April 30th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Number of small boat migrants hits TEN THOUSAND in 2025 with PM's 'smash the gangs' plan in tatters - GB News - April 30th, 2025 [April 30th, 2025]
- Keir Starmer's answer to the migrant crisis is to pay their rent, council tax and energy bills - Kelvin MacKenzie - GB News - April 30th, 2025 [April 30th, 2025]
- Trump official calls for Americans to be paid reparations over trauma caused by Biden's migrant crisis - Daily Mail - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Top Donald Trump ally calls for US citizens to receive reparations for Biden's migrant crisis trauma - GB News - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Keir Starmer issued firm warning over very foolish act as PM sweats over migrant crisis - Totally irrational - GB News - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: HUNDREDS more migrants arrive in Britain on Good Friday as record week for crossings grows again - GB News - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Somali criminal asylum seeker allowed to stay in Britain as deportation would 'stress him out' - GB News - April 14th, 2025 [April 14th, 2025]
- Britain will be 'unrecognisable in 10 years' if migrant crisis continues, Brooks claims - GB News - April 14th, 2025 [April 14th, 2025]
- The bombshell move that could end the Channel migrant hotel crisis - Daily Express - April 8th, 2025 [April 8th, 2025]
- France FINALLY admits it can do more to stop Channel crossing crisis after pocketing 500m for migrant 'taxi service' - GB News - April 8th, 2025 [April 8th, 2025]
- NYC Hotel That Symbolized Migrant Crisis to Fire Most Workers - Bloomberg - March 30th, 2025 [March 30th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Albanian criminal allowed to stay in Britain as his son could have a learning disability - GB News - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- Migrant Hotel Crisis to Drag On for Years, Treasury Confirms - The Global Treasurer - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- Trump takes 'nuclear option' at southern border to solve America's migrant crisis once and for all - Daily Mail - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- Migrant Crossings Surge Over 5000 This Year Amid Crisis - Evrim Aac - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- 'Labour has finally acknowledged that a space elsewhere is required to solve the migrant crisis' - GB News - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Tourists from Trinidad and Tobago BANNED from Britain without visa amid soaring asylum applications - GB News - March 15th, 2025 [March 15th, 2025]
- POLL OF THE DAY: Should Labour concentrate on the Channel migrant crisis rather than Ukraine? - GB News - March 15th, 2025 [March 15th, 2025]
- The Roosevelt Hotel Closure: A Wake-Up Call for Blue Cities to Rein In the Migrant Crisis - Independent Women's Forum - March 5th, 2025 [March 5th, 2025]
- AOC asks host to clarify when he refers to the migrant crisis as a 'problem' for Democrats - Fox News - March 5th, 2025 [March 5th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: French government to do more to stop Channel crossings as Macron set to lift ban on stopping boats at sea - GB News - March 5th, 2025 [March 5th, 2025]
- Trumps DOJ to toss NYC Mayor Eric Adams historic bribery case, agrees with Dem charges were politically motivated by Biden admin over migrant crisis -... - February 14th, 2025 [February 14th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Asylum seeker on the run for 18 years finally caught after police pulled car over - GB News - February 12th, 2025 [February 12th, 2025]
- One in four people in UK set to be a migrant by 2035 with taxpayers to fund 234billion crisis, study reveals - GB News - February 9th, 2025 [February 9th, 2025]
- Canadas Migrant Crisis Spills Over to US, Raising Concerns: The BorderLine - Daily Signal - February 7th, 2025 [February 7th, 2025]
- NYC Mayor Eric Adams begs Albany for $1.1B more to combat migrant crisis and says Big Apple needs it in 12 weeks - New York Post - February 5th, 2025 [February 5th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Britons fume at growing numbers five years on from Brexit - 'Invasion of rubber dinghies!' - GB News - February 5th, 2025 [February 5th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Failed asylum seeker wins right to stay in UK because of wife's kids fathered by another man - GB News - January 27th, 2025 [January 27th, 2025]
- Promise kept: How Trumps border orders are reversing the migrant crisis - New York Post - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Chicago resident who sued city over migrant crisis says 'change is on the horizon' after Trump's inauguration - Fox News - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: More than 1,000 migrants have crossed Channel since New Year - GB News - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Active-duty troops begin arriving at US-Mexico border in Texas and California to combat migrant crisis - Fox8tv - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Massachusetts Migrant Crisis: Governor Healy Ignores the Elephant in the Room - Federation for American Immigration Reform - January 19th, 2025 [January 19th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Albanian criminal allowed to remain in Britain despite being convicted of smuggling migrants into UK - GB News - January 19th, 2025 [January 19th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Germany's AfD pledge 'total closure of borders for 100 days' and mass deportations of immigrants as election draws closer - GB News - January 19th, 2025 [January 19th, 2025]
- How we searched for solutions to our migrant crisis hundreds of miles to the north in Toronto - Chicago Sun-Times - December 30th, 2024 [December 30th, 2024]
- NYC migrant crisis: For a migrant father and his sons, a year of struggle, fear and hope in New York - Newsday - December 30th, 2024 [December 30th, 2024]
- Operation Sluice and the migrant crisis as preparation for full-scale aggression - StopFake.org - December 30th, 2024 [December 30th, 2024]
- Adams says Dems missed the memo on migrant crisis and it hurt the party - PIX11 New York News - December 22nd, 2024 [December 22nd, 2024]
- 'I welcome the border czar in Chicgao': Activist sounds off on illegal migrant crisis in the Windy City - Fox News - December 22nd, 2024 [December 22nd, 2024]
- The real cause of the migrant crisis is neither migrants nor smuggling gangs - William Clouston - GB News - December 22nd, 2024 [December 22nd, 2024]
- Fox News finds a way to tie UnitedHealthcare CEO shooting to migrant crisis in New York City - The Independent - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- GOP lawmaker on migrant crisis: The left is being mugged by reality - MSN - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- GOP lawmaker on migrant crisis: The left is being mugged by reality - Fox Business - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- Eric Adams may be New Yorks best hope for tackling the migrant crisis - UnHerd - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- NYC Mayor Eric Adams will meet Trump's border czar and discuss migrant crisis next week - MSN - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- Fox anchor baselessly ties the shooting of the United Healthcare CEO to the migrant crisis - Media Matters for America - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- Battenfeld: Michelle Wu the new national face of the migrant crisis, but could she pay a price? - Boston Herald - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Lefty Mass. gov to phase out hotel rooms for illegal immigrants to address over $1B migrant crisis costs - New York Post - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Exclusive | NYPD classes canned over migrant crisis budget cuts to be reinstated adding 1.6K cops by next fall - New York Post - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Laken Riley's alleged killer Jose Ibarra flew from 'ground zero' of migrant crisis to Georgia - Fox News - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Migrant crisis in the Canary Islands: A record-breaking year - Murcia Today - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Not a chance in HELL it works! Keir Starmer told to forget new plan to tackle migrant crisis - GB News - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Battenfeld: Massachusetts will get no relief from migrant crisis thanks to Maura Healey - Boston Herald - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Is Italy's plan to outsource migrant crisis to Albania falling through? - Firstpost - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Channel migrant crisis on course for 40,000 by year's end - as almost 33,000 cross so far in 2024 - GB News - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Smash the gangs is just Keir Starmers version of stop the boats. It wont solve the migrant crisis - The Guardian - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Migrant crisis as 600 risk everything to cross Channel so far this month - Express - November 5th, 2024 [November 5th, 2024]
- Fox Business anchor pushes Trump's lie that "the illegal migrant crisis ... has taken over" Aurora, Colorado - Media Matters for America - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Nantucket's migrant crisis handling called out after quiet island rocked by wave of violent attacks - AOL - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]