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Farmers Weekly is a magazine aimed at the British farming industry. It provides news; business features; a weekly digest of facts and figures about British, European and world agriculture; and livestock, arable and machinery sections with reports on technical developments, farm sales and analysis of prices. It has both charted and captured ...
Farmers are gathering at protests across the UK on Saturday as they step up their campaign against the tax raid, which means farms valued at £1m or more would be liable for 20 per cent ...
Mass protests organised by farmer organisations, against new inheritance tax laws on agricultural assets, have taken place around the United Kingdom since November 2024. . The new laws were proposed in the October 2024 budget of the Labour government, and have led to thousands of British farmers protesting, including in Parliament Square and addressing MPs directly in parliam
The Illustrated London News; Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News; Imagine; Impact (action entertainment magazine) InStyle UK; International Cycle Sport; International Record Review; Internet Magazine; Khamsin; Knave; Krazy; New Worlds; NGC Magazine; Night Magazine; Nimbus; Nintendo Gamer; Nova; Now (1996–2019 magazine) Now! (1979–1981 ...
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Farmers Guardian is a weekly newspaper aimed at the British farming industry. It provides comprehensive and topical news with Livestock, Arable and Machinery sections; as well as business information and latest market prices. It is sold nationally and is published each Friday.
The Farmers' Weekly followed both the payments and the sex scandal narratives. [267] The new Chief Executive (the third inside a year) [268] Tony Cooper hastened to investigate. In early August there were 4 sackings and 5 disciplinary warnings, and an admission that there had been "incidents of misbehaviour that are simply unacceptable in this ...
The run of weekly programmes on Network Three came to an end on 25 August 1964 and from 31 August Farming Today (now subtitled News, market trends, and current topics) moved to a 6.35–6.50 slot on Monday to Saturday mornings on the BBC Home Service (later to become BBC Radio 4 in 1967), where it replaced the 10-minute Farm Bulletin which had ...