Lincolnshire farmers marched on Parliament in pancake day protest against inheritance tax
They joined others from around the country at the rally in London
Farmers including many from Lincolnshire returned to central London on Tuesday to protest over inheritance tax changes with a Pancake Day rally.
The protesters, accompanied by a few tractors and harvesters, met at around midday to march from Whitehall towards Parliament.
They had been warned by the Metropolitan Police not to take farm machinery above a limited pre-agreed number under the Public Order Act, after last month's demonstration caused traffic delays.
But politicians questioned the restrictions, suggesting farmers may have been treated differently from other recent protests.
Shadow environment secretary and Louth and Horncastle MP Victoria Atkins told the PA news agency:
"When we think of other demonstrations across London that happen on a weekly basis, I wonder whether quite the same restrictions are put in place for them."
And Reform UK leader Nigel Farage told PA: "It looks on the face of it to be overly heavy-handed with what is an incredibly peaceful and law-abiding group of people."
According to police at the scene, the seven machines present at the start of the protest in Whitehall were those pre-agreed under the conditions of the Public Order Act.
Scotland Yard warned that anyone breaching the conditions imposed or inciting others to do so would be committing a criminal offence and could face arrest.
Organisers had promised beforehand that the rally would be "bigger and better" than the previous two demonstrations.
Asked about the public order conditions, Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch told PA: "I think we have a peaceful protest here.
"The farmers are more interested in ensuring that people understand what they are going through."
Labour is pressing ahead with a 20% inheritance tax rate on agricultural land and businesses worth more than £1 million, which is set to come into force from April 2026.
The measure was introduced in Chancellor Rachel Reeves' first Budget, prompting a backlash from farmers who have argued it will force land sales, stall investment, and hurt families hoping to pass their farms on to the next generation.
Leadenham farmer Andrew Ward is one of the protest's organisers and says the new measures could have a severe impact:
"We've got people saying already 'well I'm sorry I don't want my family to be burdened with all this tax debt that they can't afford, so I'm going to make sure I'm not here in April 2026 when this policy kicks in' And that's just horrendous".
Mr Farage urged farmers to pressure Labour MPs in rural constituencies whose majorities are "cigarette paper-thin".
Speaking at the protest, he said: "That is where the pressure is going to come.
"They are 1,500 here and 2,000 there. I think if they (Labour) start to realise that local communities are getting behind the farmers you will see a lot more Labour MPs rebelling."
As Mr Farage spoke, protesters passing by on the march shouted: "Thank you for coming, Nigel."
Tom Bradshaw, president of the National Farmers' Union, said it was "another really impactful day".
"Farmers are clearly showing the government that we are not going away," he said.
"We can't go away because of this pernicious policy hanging over the farming industry, the elderly caught in the eye of the storm, what it means for the future of food production.
"There is too much at stake here."
The Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives have urged Labour to scrap the changes, which Ms Badenoch last week labelled "immoral".
The Government defended the move as a "fair and balanced approach" but opposition from within the Labour Party is growing, after a third MP publicly came out against the tax raid on Monday.