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European farmers' discontent with EU climate policies may sway elections: expert

An expert told NPR that the frustrations felt by European farmers over the EU's climate policies could sway the ongoing 2024 European Parliament election.

European farmers' frustration with climate policies touted by the European Union (EU) could sway the 2024 European Parliament election, according to an expert.

The election began on June 6, and ends on Sunday. In a recent NPR interview, an agricultural policy specialist explained that the recent protests by European farmers could prove influential over the weekend.

Alan Matthews, a retired professor of European agricultural policy at Trinity College in Dublin, said that the farmers' discontent stems from the EU expecting them to be "part ecologist, part nature conservationist," among other things.

"They need to know how they're impacting greenhouse gas emissions. So there's a whole range of additional obligations, requirements, if you like, that we're asking farmers to make," he acknowledged.

SPANISH AND FRENCH FARMERS FORM BORDER BLOCKADE BEFORE EU ELECTION

"We now have farmer protests instead of youth protests prior to the European elections," Matthews added. "I think that the protests in themselves are likely to have a similar impact [as the youth protests did]."

In an interview with NPR, German farmer Anthony Lee accused the European Green Party of "trying to get rid of small farming businesses."

"They tell us the opposite," Lee said. "The first farms that go bankrupt are small farms because they can’t cope with this system."

Lee, who is running in the current election, also accused European politicians of exerting too much control over how farmers conduct their own business. Part of that comes from how bureaucrats monitor farms on a regular basis.

POLISH FARMERS MARCH IN WARSAW OPPOSING EUROPEAN UNION CLIMATE POLICIES

"Every three days, satellites fly over our property, our fields," Lee told NPR. "And then every farmer has to download an app, and we get push messages that say: 'On your field on such and such a day, something’s not right. Take a picture and send us this picture.’ That’s how crazy it’s gotten now."

"If the satellite picture shows you or shows to the government that something is not correct, so if you say we grow wheat and [instead] you grow corn, it would automatically send them a message that there's something wrong," he described. "Or if you bring out manure [at] a certain time which you're not allowed, or if you plow your field, I mean, they are honestly talking about not plowing."

Last month, tens of thousands of Polish farmers marched in Warsaw against the EU's climate policies.

"We are protesting because we don’t want to become slaves on our own land," dairy farmer Grazyna Gasowska said at the time. "According to the Green Deal we are supposed to grow what they tell us to, when they tell us to."

"All those diversification requirements are very difficult for the farmers," she added.

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