I beg to move, That the Bill be now read a Second time.
This is my fourth attempt to bring in a Bill to amend the Food Labelling Regulations 1996 and my first opportunity, after seven years of trying, to get a Second Reading debate. I am therefore very pleased to have this opportunity today. My Bill seeks to amend those regulations to provide for information about the country of origin of food to be made available to consumers. That is it; I am not trying to restrict imports from anywhere.
I am not trying to prevent people who love Spanish chorizo from buying as much of it as they want. I am not trying to prevent people who want genuine German wurst from buying it by the Mercedes Benz truck load and importing it into this country to sell to all the people who want to buy it. I am not trying to prevent those who are partial to kangaroo meat from buying that, either. According to the website of J. M. Danslow, a quality butcher in Gravesend, kangaroo meat is"““used by some of the world's best restaurants because of its high quality and unique flavour.””"
Those who are partial to kangaroo meat have nothing to fear from my Bill. Those who like bison, which is"““the most flavoured red meat available to today's consumer …nutritious, tender and easy to prepare””,"
can also set their minds at rest.
Likewise, no one who likes eating reindeer meat, which according to Danslow is"““fine-fibred, tender and lean””"
as well as being"““rich in vitamin A, vitamin E and all vitamins B””,"
has any cause for concern. I might add that there are other concerns about reindeer meat, as the Swedish store Ikea found to its cost a couple of years ago when it started selling salami made from reindeer in its UK stores at Christmas time. The idea that Rudolf's big thank you for helping Santa to deliver all his presents in double-quick time was to be chopped up and turned into salami for the Christmas dinner table was a little too much for the nation's children and their parents to bear. But, if there are still any secret reindeer meat eaters out there following that debacle, they have nothing to fear from my Bill.
My Bill seeks to do one thing: I just want consumers to know where meat comes from. I want them to know, not to think or to guess or to hope. If producers say on the label that meat is British, it should actually be British. I have set out this argument in the House on four previous occasions: on 22 March 2004; on 29 October 2008; and in a slightly different Bill on 17 March 2009, which is identical to the Bill that I asked the Leader of the House to introduce on 11 January 2011. So I will not detain the House for very long.
Food Labelling Regulations (Amendment) Bill
Proceeding contribution from
Richard Bacon
(Conservative)
in the House of Commons on Friday, 1 April 2011.
It occurred during Debate on bills on Food Labelling Regulations (Amendment) Bill.
About this proceeding contribution
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2010-12Chamber / Committee
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