Farage vows to 'fight monstrous attack on our freedoms' as he joins supporters in outrage against Keir Starmer's plans to stop trail hunting
The Countryside Alliance said Labour had 'alienated rural people', with a poll suggesting 65 per cent of voters think the Government unfairly neglects country communities.
Hunt supporters attacked Keir Starmer's plan to ban trail hunting with thousands gathering at Boxing Day hunts across the country yesterday.
Just days before Christmas, the Government had announced plans to ban the rural past-time with a consultation set to launch next year.
The Countryside Alliance said Labour had 'alienated rural people', with a poll suggesting 65 per cent of voters think the Government unfairly neglects country communities.
Trail hunting, introduced after the creation of the Hunting Act 2004, involves a scent being sprayed onto a rag which is then dragged across the countryside by a huntsman for the hounds to chase. It replicates traditional hunting methods but live animals are no longer pursued.
Campaigners defend the practice saying that hunts contribute more than £100million a year to the rural economy and form part of the social fabric of rural life.
Boxing Day is one of the most celebrated days in the hunting calendar with communities turning out to greet riders and hounds before they set off.
Supporters estimate that tens of thousands of people attended about 200 hunt meets this year, with huge crowds being reported in Matching Green in Essex, Ludlow in Shropshire, and Chipping Norton in Oxfordshire.
One of the largest meetings took place on the Duke of Beaufort's estate near Badminton, Gloucestershire, where thousands watched dozens of horses and fox hounds go trail hunting.
Nigel Farage enjoys a beer as he mixes with members of the public waiting at Chiddingstone Castle for the annual Boxing Day hunt
Riders with horses and hounds take part in the Old Surrey, Burstow and West Kent Hunt Boxing Day Meet
Hounds meet members of the public during the Tedworth Hunt's Boxing Day meet in Pewsey, Wiltshire
Will Bryer, joint master of the hunt, claimed the countryside was 'under assault and siege'.
He said: 'I just wonder whether our Government would have made that announcement had they predicted a turnout like this.
'It is somewhat ironic that the Government choose to announce their intentions to destroy trail hunting just at a time of year when we reaffirm our beliefs.
'So, we're under assault, we're under siege and like all fights it's going to get messy.'
Nigel Farage vowed to 'fight and stop this monstrous attack on our freedoms'. The Reform UK leader attended a hunt at Chiddingstone Castle in Kent, where he called on the Government to change course and protect a tradition that has 'been going on for centuries'.
He said: 'The Boxing Day hunt meet is one of my most happy events of my year. Good people of all ages and classes meeting in a rural location. If they ban this, they may as well ban horseriding and dogwalking. Labour MPs in country seats will rebel.'