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- Blair sacks Meacher
- 2003
- 10 reasons supermarket mergers are bad for consumers, farmers and small businesses
- Asda spinach over pesticide levels
- Asda/Wal-Mart exploits planning loophole
- Biting back at GM crops
- Blair sacks Meacher
- Committee Stage for Recycling Bill
- Cornwall goes GM-free
- Credibility of GM public debate hangs by a thread
- Cumbria goes GM-free
- Deplorable attack on GM scientific critic
- Devon votes to go GM-free
- Dorset demands caution over GM crops
- EU commission calls for GM contamination of organic food to be allowed
- EU meets US over GM trade war
- Farmers and consumers must have a say in Wal-Mart takeover
- Fat cats fight over Safeway, consumers and farmers are real losers
- Fat-cat Tesco: putting on the pounds at farmers' expense
- Garden pesticides health warning
- GM activists make a pilgrimage for a GM-free Britain
- GM activists make a pilgrimage for a GM-free Britain
- GM beet research answers very few questions
- GM contamination - Government experts disagree
- GM jury challenges FSA policy on labelling
- GM public debate fiasco
- GM study highlights need for urgent rethink over GM crops
- GM trade war - who decides what we eat?
- GM trade war accelerates
- GM won't cure hunger in Africa
- GM-free food could be "impossible"
- Government agrees to delay GM debate
- Government failing to regulate supermarkets, says new report
- Government launches GM debate
- Government may ignore public opinion on GM crops
- Government must address GM debate chaos say groups
- Government must clarify role of GM debate
- Government opposes tough Euro GM rules
- Government report on economics of GM crops
- Government to publish GM science review
- Government urges MEPs to vote for GM food
- Government warns GM farmers over contamination threat
- Hundreds of pesticides banned
- Hundreds turn out for Waste lobby
- Illegal GM contamination threat
- Is Tesco spin on Safeway takeover a joke?
- Lake District National Park first to go GM-free
- Lake District National Park to host GM debate
- Local campaigners call for GM-free Britain election pledge
- MEPs back tougher GM labels
- Ministers try to stop GM food labels
- Morrisons take-over bad news for consumers
- MPs call for extension to GM national debate
- New analysis casts doubt on GM farm scale evaluations
- New maps reveal massive extent of GM pollution threat
- Pesticide review fails consumers and farmers
- Recycling Bill clears the Commons
- Safeway decision must wait for code review
- Sainsbury's: making life taste bitter for banana growers
- Scepticism as GM debate ends
- Second reading for Recycling Bill
- Shameful EU plans for growing GM crops
- Shropshire goes gm-free
- Slow progress on pesticide residues
- Slow progress on pesticide residues
- South Gloucestershire votes to go GM-free
- South Hams votes to go GM-free
- Stop Safeway stitch-up, alliance demands
- Supermarket code fails farmers
- Supermarket code fails farmers
- Supermarkets continue to shun GM food
- Supermarkets must be blocked from Safeway takeover
- The US ghost fleet – behind the hype
- UK votes to keep highly toxic pesticide
- UN treaty regulating GM to become law
- Uncertainty over GM safety
- US files WTO GM complaint
- US threat over GM food
- Warwickshire goes GM-free
- Why the Safeway take-over must be stopped
Blair sacks Meacher13 June 2003
Prime Minister Tony Blair's decision to sack Environment Minister Michael Meacher is yet another sign that the Government is failing to take green issues seriously. Meacher has a high reputation among environmental campaigners, and had frequently been seen as a "lone voice" in taking a greener line than the general government view, for example over genetically modified food and crops.
His greatest achievement in office was the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 which secured greater protection for Britain's wildlife areas. He also played an important role in international negotiations over the Kyoto Treaty, the first international agreement designed to cut greenhouse gas emissions and fight man-made climate change. He was an enthusiastic supporter of Mr Blair's pre-Election pledge to "put the environment at the heart of Government".
But, he was the only Labour Shadow Cabinet member not made a Cabinet Minister after the 1997 General Election, and he was required to work as a Minister of State in successive super-Ministries, first at the Department of Transport, Environment and the Regions under John Prescott and then at the Department of Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs under Margaret Beckett.
Although the creation of DEFRA has brought environmental concerns to food and farming policy for perhaps the first time, it has also effectively sidelined the environment as a factor in many other crucial political areas, for example transport, trade, business and planning. Partly as a result, the Government is now committed to a revived road building programme and to large-scale house building on Greenfield sites across the country.
Last year, No 10 attempted to remove Meacher from the UK delegation to the UN Earth Summit in Johannesburg, and he was only reinstated after Friends of the Earth offered to pay his costs. Green groups had become increasingly concerned that he was being used by Mr Blair as a shield against environmental critics, without being allowed a real say in key policy areas.
"Everyone who cares about the environment will be sad to see Mr Meacher leave the Government," Friends of the Earth Executive Director, Tony Juniper. "He was a true enthusiast for green issues, and developed a real expertise that enabled him to challenge the greyer parts of Whitehall. His successor will have to work hard to gain the reputation Michael enjoys with green campaigners. The critical question is not so much the qualities of Mr Meacher's successor, but whether the Government will pursue policies that genuinely put the environment at the heart of Government. No 10 has being trying to marginalise Michael for some time now. But Mr Blair may find that the removal of Mr Meacher as a green fig-leaf just leaves this Government's poor green record embarrassingly apparent for all to see."
Earlier this week the Sunday Telegraph suggested that Mr Meacher's job was under threat following pressure from the biotech industry because of his cautious attitude toward GM crops. Earlier this month the Government launched a nationwide GM public debate and is expected to make a decision on whether GM crops should be commercialised towards the end of the year. "With the Government's GM public debate barely 10 days old, the one minister urging caution on this issue has been sacked," said Tony Juniper. "This move increases fears that the Government won't listen to public opinion and is preparing to allow GM crops to be commercially grown in the UK."
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