Jeremy Clarkson rips into Green Party candidate for Makerfield over claims âfarming is racistâ: âLoony leftery!â
The Clarksonâs Farm star was understandably taken aback by the Greensâ choice for the upcoming by-election
Mr Clarkson has spoken out about the Green Partyâs decision to confirm Sarah Wakefield as its candidate for the Makerfield by-election following the withdrawal of the partyâs initial choice, Chris Kennedy.
The 38-year-old Manchester City councillor serves as executive director of Eating Better, an environmental charity that has faced scrutiny over its stance on British agriculture.
Ms Wakefield, a mother of two, previously sought selection for the Gorton and Denton contest earlier this year but lost out to Hannah Spencer, who subsequently became the partyâs fifth MP.
The by-election was triggered after Labourâs Josh Simons announced his resignation from the seat.

Jeremy Clarkson runs his own farm in the Cotswolds
Eating Better has organised workshops encouraging participants to adopt âdecolonial decision-makingâ and establish âintentionally inclusive spacesâ within the British agricultural sector.
Materials published on the charityâs website urged attendees to recognise âthe unseen advantages they may have had and how people without these characteristics may have faced barriersâ.
The organisation also circulated a report last year by American activist Caroline J Sumlin that examined âwhite supremacy cultureâ in farming and proposed methods to confront âcolonial power and legaciesâ within the food industry.
The document identified âdefensiveness, âperfectionism,â and âa sense of urgencyâ as manifestations of what it termed white supremacy culture.

Sarah Wakefield is the Green candidate in Makerfield
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Under a section titled âdecolonialityâ, the report advocated action that âde-centres western knowledge and celebrates the knowledge of indigenous, racialised and marginalised communitiesâ.
Ms Wakefield also penned the foreword to Eating Betterâs âNourishing Justiceâ report, which asserted that Britainâs food system âmirrors and entrenches racial oppression and exclusion where it exists in societyâ.
The document claimed that race exerts âa huge influence on peopleâs experience of the entire food system, from food access, to food sector work, to inclusion in food policy spacesâ.
A farmer himself, Mr Clarkson was keen to give his take on Ms Wakefield in his latest column for The Sunday Times.

Jeremy Clarkson predictably disagreed with Ms Wakefieldâs charityâs report
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He suggested the Greens were attempting to pave the way for an Andy Burnham and Labour victory by âfielding a candidate who, on the face of it, is completely madâ and has a âfully fledged degree in loony lefteryâ.
He went on to reference the report published by Ms Wakefieldâs charity, claiming its findings revealed that âfarming is racist⊠and that the whole food industry needs to decolonisedâ.
Unable to resist a dig at the left, he added: âPotatoes are a classic example of cultural appropriation, unlike having dreadlocks or wearing a keffiyeh, which are not, obviously.â
But it wasnât just Ms Wakefield who ended up in the former Top Gear starâs firing line, as he similarly took aim at Mr Burnham.

Jeremy Clarkson returns for a fifth season of Clarksonâs Farm this month
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After sarcastically ripping into Eating Better, he added: âSo there we are. Sarah Wakefield is a loony and if all goes well, no one will vote for her.
âBurnham will therefore win, become prime minister and set about reliving the socialistic glory days of the 1970s. Power cuts. Bankruptcies. Strikes. Rubbish piled high in the streets and dead rats everywhere. Perfection.â
In a surprise turn of events, however, Mr Clarkson actually threw his support behind the Green candidate, praising the fact she has âreal-world experienceâ unlike the âentire Labour front benchâ.
After pointing out that the Makerfield by-election appears to be a two-horse race between Reform UK and Labour, Mr Clarkson signed off: âCan you imagine if the left-leaning people of Makerfield were aware of Sarah and what a decent, hardworking mother she is? Could she win?

Andy Burnham is also running in the Makerfield by-election
 | GETTYâProbably not, but if she split the vote and caused Burnham to lose, he would look like a massive a**e. And so would the idiot who gave up his job to make way for him.
âWith that thought ringing in my head, I will end by saying what the Green Party will not: go Sarah. Go.â
Ms Wakefield has defended her position and explained her perspective on decolonisation since the report came under fire from many in the agricultural world.
She told the BBC: âDecolonisation basically means that weâre listening to marginalised voices in debates on things like food.â
She linked Britainâs high consumption of ultra-processed food to multinational corporations exploiting farmers in former colonies, suggesting this contributed to rising rates of bowel cancer and childhood obesity.
A Green Party spokesman said their candidate was âmaking the point that fairer distribution and better access to healthy food is good for peopleâs healthâ.



