Come 5 July, an almighty struggle looms. Keir Starmer, take at the nation-state at your peril | Simon Jenkins

come-5-july,-an-almighty-struggle-looms.-keir-starmer,-take-at-the-nation-state-at-your-peril-|-simon-jenkins

Come 5 July, an almighty struggle looms. Keir Starmer, take at the nation-state at your peril | Simon Jenkins

Britain’s landscape is under threat from developers and rapacious corporations. But I have a solution – if the next PM will listen

What do Britons most love about Britain? At the last count it was still the NHS. After that it was not the royal family, the army or democracy. Believe it or not, it is the countryside, according to polling commissioned last year by Future Countryside, an initiative of the Countryside Alliance. Today, the NHS may cram election manifestos, but of the countryside we hear not a word.

This will not last. An almighty clash is looming between the lucrative renewables industry and defenders of the rural landscape. Labour and the Tories are both eager to weaken local planning. Keir Starmer wants to curb the rights of citizens to object to new development in the countryside. The Tories recently announced a return to onshore wind, hence the proposal for a turbine cluster on the Yorkshire Moors above Charlotte Brontë’s Calderdale. Sixty-five turbines funded by the Saudis are to rise a staggering 200m each, higher than Blackpool Tower. It is hard to believe such an outrage is to be allowed for so trivial a contribution to the climate.

Simon Jenkins is a Guardian columnist

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