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C'est pas juste les politiques d'immigration aveugle, c'est aussi les taxes et politiques enviro trop lourdes, contraignantes et rapides... je t'invite à lire cet article: https://www.politico.eu/article/far-right-giorgia-meloni-europe-swings-right-and-reshapes-the-eu ou ça: https://www.economist.com/international/2023/10/11/the-global-backlash-against-climate-policies-has-begun

Tout n'est pas toujours rapporté dans nos médias ici, mais un évènement en particulier a été très médiatisé ici, la hausse de la taxe sur le carburant en France.... gilet jaunes et désordre civil pendant des mois. J'espère que tu t'en rappelles.

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On 12/9/2023 at 5:11 PM, mtlurb said:

C'est pas juste les politiques d'immigration aveugle, c'est aussi les taxes et politiques enviro trop lourdes, contraignantes et rapides... je t'invite à lire cet article: https://www.politico.eu/article/far-right-giorgia-meloni-europe-swings-right-and-reshapes-the-eu ou ça: https://www.economist.com/international/2023/10/11/the-global-backlash-against-climate-policies-has-begun

Tout n'est pas toujours rapporté dans nos médias ici, mais un évènement en particulier a été très médiatisé ici, la hausse de la taxe sur le carburant en France.... gilet jaunes et désordre civil pendant des mois. J'espère que tu t'en rappelles.

German government backtracks on tax hikes for farmers following protests

The country’s ruling coalition continues to struggle to finalize a budget for 2024.

JANUARY 4, 2024 5:56 PM CET
2 MINUTES READ

BERLIN — Germany's three-party ruling coalition on Thursday partly backed down from a proposal to cut tax privileges for farmers after facing emotional protests.

The government said in a statement that it would gradually phase out tax breaks on diesel fuel for farmers over multiple years rather than cut the benefit abruptly as coalition leaders had initially proposed, in order to “give the affected companies more time to adjust." The government also said it would waive planned tax increases for agricultural vehicles.

The leaders of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's coalition had previously announced the tax hikes on farmers as part of a draft budget deal for 2024 presented last month. The planned increases were part of the coalition’s attempts to plug a multi-billion-euro budget gap that appeared after the country’s top court ruled that some of its spending practices were unlawful.

In response to the coalition’s proposal, farmers organized a major protest in Berlin in which a convoy of 1,700 tractors blocked the main road leading to the Brandenburg Gate. Farmers have also planned nationwide protests for next week.

The coalition climbdown is unlikely to appease the protesters.

"This can only be a first step,” said Joachim Rukwied, president of the German Farmers' Association. “Our position remains unchanged: Both proposals for cuts must be taken off the table. This is clearly also about the future viability of our industry and the question of whether domestic food production is still desirable at all."

As the ruling coalition struggles to finalize a budget for 2024, the continued resistance of farmers illustrates how difficult it will be for party leaders to agree budget cuts without political repercussions.

The government said it plans to compensate for the latest change to its budget plan partly by using revenue from offshore wind tenders.

https://www.politico.eu/article/germany-government-backtracks-tax-hikes-farmers-protests/

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il y a 28 minutes, mtlurb a dit :

German government backtracks on tax hikes for farmers following protests

The country’s ruling coalition continues to struggle to finalize a budget for 2024.

JANUARY 4, 2024 5:56 PM CET
2 MINUTES READ

BERLIN — Germany's three-party ruling coalition on Thursday partly backed down from a proposal to cut tax privileges for farmers after facing emotional protests.

The government said in a statement that it would gradually phase out tax breaks on diesel fuel for farmers over multiple years rather than cut the benefit abruptly as coalition leaders had initially proposed, in order to “give the affected companies more time to adjust." The government also said it would waive planned tax increases for agricultural vehicles.

The leaders of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's coalition had previously announced the tax hikes on farmers as part of a draft budget deal for 2024 presented last month. The planned increases were part of the coalition’s attempts to plug a multi-billion-euro budget gap that appeared after the country’s top court ruled that some of its spending practices were unlawful.

In response to the coalition’s proposal, farmers organized a major protest in Berlin in which a convoy of 1,700 tractors blocked the main road leading to the Brandenburg Gate. Farmers have also planned nationwide protests for next week.

The coalition climbdown is unlikely to appease the protesters.

"This can only be a first step,” said Joachim Rukwied, president of the German Farmers' Association. “Our position remains unchanged: Both proposals for cuts must be taken off the table. This is clearly also about the future viability of our industry and the question of whether domestic food production is still desirable at all."

As the ruling coalition struggles to finalize a budget for 2024, the continued resistance of farmers illustrates how difficult it will be for party leaders to agree budget cuts without political repercussions.

The government said it plans to compensate for the latest change to its budget plan partly by using revenue from offshore wind tenders.

https://www.politico.eu/article/germany-government-backtracks-tax-hikes-farmers-protests/

J'ai pas encore vue de machinerie agricole qui ne fonctionne pas avec du diesel. Les politiciens sont dans leur monde virtuel détaché de la realité.

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Just now, andre md said:

J'ai pas encore vue de machinerie agricole qui ne fonctionne pas avec du diesel. Les politiciens sont dans leur monde virtuel détaché de la realité.

"Mangez local" mais on va four*** les agriculteurs locaux... tsé c'est juste logique 🤡

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Of course nowhere is their any talk about slimming municipal government, reducing costs. I think we are in for our last year of socialism in Canada, I hope so since we as citizens of cities have our financial backs to the wall! 

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/toronto-property-tax-hike-1.7075778

 

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  • 4 mois plus tard...
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Le 2023-12-09 à 17:11, mtlurb a dit :

C'est pas juste les politiques d'immigration aveugle, c'est aussi les taxes et politiques enviro trop lourdes, contraignantes et rapides... je t'invite à lire cet article: https://www.politico.eu/article/far-right-giorgia-meloni-europe-swings-right-and-reshapes-the-eu ou ça: https://www.economist.com/international/2023/10/11/the-global-backlash-against-climate-policies-has-begun

Tout n'est pas toujours rapporté dans nos médias ici, mais un évènement en particulier a été très médiatisé ici, la hausse de la taxe sur le carburant en France.... gilet jaunes et désordre civil pendant des mois. J'espère que tu t'en rappelles.

C'est quand même drôle que l'antidote de la "far right" c'est les "verts"... et non le "far left" comme ils devraient être étiquetés par Reuters... du grand journalisme de gauche lol

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Europe's battered Green movement tries to salvage climate agenda

'There is a bit of a social backlash against climate protection'

 

member_of_the_european_greens_party_bas_

BRUSSELS/DRESDEN, Germany — Millions of young people took to the streets across Europe in 2019 demanding action to fight climate change, helping Green parties secure their best ever EU election results and giving them influence over climate policies Brussels has passed since.

That looks set to change. Polls suggest Greens will perform worse than any other political grouping in June's EU election, which will form the next 720-member European Parliament. They look set to lose nearly a third of their current 72 EU lawmakers.

"It was of course a great feeling in 2019. People all loved us and the climate was the number one topic," Green EU lawmaker Anna Cavazzini told Reuters.

"That's a little different now, of course. Overall, I would say there is a bit of a social backlash against climate protection."

Instead of hordes of young supporters in the streets, some Green candidates running this year have reported physical attacks and vandalism on the campaign trail.

Fewer Greens in the next European Parliament will affect EU climate policy for the next five years, as the bloc's "Green Deal" moves into a politically sensitive phase in which the economic impact of Green goals will become more visible.

"The elections will be about the future of the Green Deal," said Bas Eickhout, the Dutch EU lawmaker co-leading the Greens into the EU election.

COMPETING CONCERNS

Analysts and EU lawmakers from across the political spectrum attribute the Greens' expected decline to factors ranging from voters' reaction to a cost of living crisis, anxiety over issues like migration — which has boosted support for far-right parties — and anger over unpopular moves by Green politicians in national governments.

"The big topics now are competitiveness, security, social issues, immigration, and these are topics on which the Greens struggle a little bit more," said Davide Ferrari, head of research at research platform EU Matrix.

Climate change has accelerated since the last EU election, pushing the world this year to cap its first 12-month spell of temperatures more than 1.5C above pre-industrial times. Polls show most European voters — around three-quarters — remain highly concerned.

But other worries have taken centre stage.

In an Ipsos poll of 26,000 Europeans published in March by Euronews, respondents ranked climate change as only the sixth priority issue for the EU to tackle — behind inflation, illegal immigration and unemployment.

In Germany, whose 25 Green members of the European Parliament far outnumber those of any other EU country, the party's role in government has also knocked their popularity.

A stuttering economy and unpopular policies including a draft plan to phase out fossil fuel boilers pushed German satisfaction with their government to a record low of 27% in January.

Approval ratings for Economy and Climate Minister Robert Habeck, Europe's most senior Green politician, almost halved between June 2022 and May 2023, a YouGov survey showed.

"The German economy is now entering difficult waters," said Stefan Marschall, a political scientist at the University of Duesseldorf.

"As soon as environmental policy is designed in concrete terms, then it becomes clear that this is something that also costs money ... that leads to people turning away," he added.

FIGHTING BACK

Polls suggest gains in next month's election for right-wing and far-right parties that could erode the next EU assembly's ability to pass ambitious new climate policies.

Major climate decisions for the next EU Parliament include a decision on the EU’s legally binding 2040 climate target. So far, the EU has stuck to a science-aligned 90% emissions cut proposal under pressure from the Greens.

The EU has already passed more than two dozen emissions-cutting policies into law, including renewable energy targets and a 2035 ban on new CO2-emitting cars.

Those policies can't be revoked, but many have a legal "review" scheduled in the next few years, which some EU officials suggest a more climate-skeptical parliament could use to add loopholes or undo parts of the laws, slowing Europe's Green transition.

With two and half weeks until EU citizens head to the polls, the Greens are highlighting what they see as the dangers posed by the far right.

Sybren Kooistra, who manages the EU Greens' election campaign strategy, said that in the last EU election, climate change was the top issue, but not any more.

"It's not working with the same fire and emotion as when we talk about freedom and the far right," Kooistra told Reuters. "This is more about fighting the far right."

Greens on the campaign trail today emphasise their platform includes social fairness and support for European industries to stay competitive, while also attacking the far right.

German climate activist Luisa Neubauer, a prominent figure in the Fridays For Future youth movement that held mass climate protests ahead of the 2019 election, said other parties were paying more attention to climate, but the Greens still set the bar.

"If the Green Party in the European Parliament compromises on climate, on environment, they lower the bar for everyone else," Neubauer said.

Speaking to Reuters during an afternoon of door-to-door campaigning in the eastern city of Dresden this month, lawmaker Cavazzini described the Greens as also the antidote to the far right.

"They hate everything we want. We also find everything they want to be terrible," she said.

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