Thousands of farmers in tractors and trucks protested in the Netherlands, Germany, France, Ireland, Sweden, Portugal, Greece, and Spain. Farmers in Poland are planning to block the Ukrainian border. The French farmers held Paris under siege, blocking roads, pouring manure everywhere, and leaving supermarket shelves empty; then, after they won some concessions from President Macron, they kept on driving to Brussels and did it all again with help from farmers from other countries. The EU is the target.

The thing that made this so potent was not just that the farmers had heavy equipment that moved obstacles and drove over barriers; they also had huge public support. Something like 80 to 90% of French citizens supported the farmers and were willing to put up with the inconvenience. Then, to cap it off, EU elections are coming in June, and they only happen once every five years. The Greens look like they will do badly.  That people like Geert Wilders can win in national elections must have shocked the politerati class. But right-wing governments have been elected in Italy, Sweden, and Finland, too.

This looks like a major win. Not only is the EU backing down on the demands to cut nitrogen and methane by a third, but they’re also not going to halve the use of pesticides, and they’re not even going to harass EU citizens smugly telling them to eat less meat.

The next big move of climate activists was through agriculture, but this has, for the moment, hit the fan…

EU drops net zero demands after farmers’ protests

The Telegraph

The European Union has caved in to angry protests from farmers and cut a target to slash agricultural emissions as part of the bloc’s net zero drive.

A demand to reduce nitrogen, methane, and other emissions linked to farming by almost a third has been removed from a wider Brussels plan to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 90 percent by 2040.

The move to offer concessions to the farmers would be seen as a major step away from the bloc’s original green plans.

People may have missed just how big the European farmer protests have been. For some reason the media didn’t want to cover what happens when farmers get angry. Like the truck-driver protests in Canada last year, these sorts of revolts are potentially dangerous to the political class. They can bring a nation to its knees in days. Journalists and media moguls scorn the workers, but they quietly fear their power. If the masses wake up and realize they don’t have to put up with rules set by chattering classes and desk jocks, that could wreck the cushy lifestyles of the wordsmiths and academics.

A truckload of manure can stop the traffic…

Farmer Protests

Such was the anger, there were fires in the carpark of the EU Parliament and fires on French highways.

Farmer Protests

 

 

 

Reuters: At least 14 highways in the regions of Catalonia, Andalusia, Castille-La Mancha, and Valencia were blockaded, official traffic data showed.

Victor Orban, PM of Hungary, explains that the EU rules destroy farming in Europe by imposing rules on European farmers but then allowing produce from other parts of the world to come that have none of these rules. The push to reduce pesticides and force organic farming onto European farms, but not on imports, was one of the major complaints about EU regulations.

 

Nigel Farage explains the importance a week ago:

 

 

 

 

The war is far from over. After the elections, if there is any way they can, the EU still wants to bring in absurd laws of climate voodoo and witchcraft.

Green backlash looms over EU elections

[Reuters] The European Commission is set to recommend an ambitious goal to cut net greenhouse gas emissions by 90% by 2040. The target would aim to foster green jobs and low-carbon industries, drafts of the proposal showed.

Polls show more seats could go to far-right and right-leaning parties opposed to climate policies. EU officials say backing for ambitious green laws has also been eroded among EU states by recent elections in Finland, Sweden, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg.

Photos came from these Twitter links:

Thank you, Elon.

This article originally appeared at JoNova