Jeremy Clarkson has banned every Labour MP from his pub except one – Bundlezy

Jeremy Clarkson has banned every Labour MP from his pub except one

Jeremy Clarkson looks annoyed while on the other side of the image we see the Labour party in Westminster.
Jeremy Clarkson isn’t a happy publican (Picture: PA/House of Commons)

Jeremy Clarkson is no stranger to banning people from his pub at this point.

The motoring journalist turned farmer barred his former Top Gear co-star James May from entering The Farmer’s Dog, as well as a woman who requested Tabasco in her Bloody Mary.

However, arguably the most famous person who can’t get a pint at Jeremy’s bar is Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

Now, though, the 65-year-old has just barred 403 individuals from his ale house and restaurant.

‘To be clear, I have banned all Labour MPs from my pub,’ the presenter told The Sun.

Jeremy claimed that rising taxes were the reason behind the ban.

FILE PICTURE - Jeremy Clarkson's pub: The Farmer's Dog near Burford in the Cotswolds. Release date June 6 2025. Jeremy Clarkson has banned a customer from his pub - after he complained about the prices. The former Top Gear has told Kal Knott he's not welcome at the Farmer's Dog - because he moaned about the cost of a meal. Kal posted on X: "Jeremy Clarkson wanted an affordable pub for customers. ?24 for a pie and veg is a bit much.? Clarkson hit back and responded: ?Have you seen beef prices right now? If you could make it for less, I?ll give you a job.? This was before he later added: ?You are now banned from the pub."
If you’re a Labour MP, you aren’t getting into The Farmer’s Dog (Picture: Emma Trimble / SWNS)
Pics show: PMQS 10.12.25 Kemi Badenoch lashed into Keir Starmer alongside Shabana Mahmood, Rachel Reeves And Brigit Phillipson today Over leadership and teacher numbers amongst other topics supplied by Pixel8000
Previously, Keir Starmer was banned from the pub (Picture: Pixel8000)

‘Our annual business rates have gone up astronomically from something like £28,000 to well over £50,000. It is a disgrace,’ he said.

This isn’t the first time Jeremy has complained about the financial difficulties his pub has been facing.

Writing in his column for The Times, he said: ‘It’s galling to see how much effort is required to make so little money on the farm.

‘It’s worse at the pub. The customers are coming. There’s no problem there. But turning their visits into a profit is nigh-on impossible.’

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Alan West/Hogan Media/Shutterstock (15452916dg) Jeremy Clarkson pictured in the Cheese Hub at the Big Feastival 2025 The Big Feastival at Alex James' Farm, Day 2, Kingham, Oxfordshire, UK - 23 Aug 2025
Jeremy isn’t a big fan of Labour’s tax plans (Picture: Alan West/Hogan Media/Shutterstock)

However, Jeremt has made one exception to his sweeping ban.

On X, Jeremy posted that the Member of Parliament for Penrith and Solway, Markus Campbell Savours, was ‘welcome any time’ before joking, ‘and not just because the Labour Party has now sacked him.’

Markus recently voted against the government’s plans to change the tax rules around inherited farmland from April next year, which is presumably why he’s not been barred.

Jeremy is just one of a number of pub landlords barring Labour MPs from their premises.

Markus Campbell-Savours is the Labour MP for Penrith and Solway, and has been an MP continually since 4 July 2024.
Markus Campbell Savours escaped the ban after rebelling against the government (Picture: Laurie Noble)

It’s all part of a campaign – called Taxed Out – protesting rising business rates in the hospitality sector.

As part of the campaign, pubs have been encouraged to put up posters and use beermats with the slogan ‘No Labour MPs’ on them.

On the Taxed Out website, organisers claim that since the 2024 budget, 89,000 jobs have been lost in the hospitality sector.

‘Hospitality businesses are reporting jobs being lost, hours cut, investment cancelled, and businesses closing,’ their website reads.

TV presenter and farmer Jeremy Clarkson joins thousands of farmers protesting in Whitehall against changes made by the UK government to agricultural inheritance tax on 19th November 2024 in London, United Kingdom. Government ministers have intimated that they will not reverse the changes, made in the recent budget, and that the money raised by them will be allocated to schools and health.(photo by Mark Kerrison/In Pictures via Getty Images)
Jeremy has previously joined farmers protesting new inheritance tax rules (Picture: In Pictures via Getty Images)

They go on to say that the burden of tax on them is unfair, claiming that even before the Budget, hospitality was paying the most tax of any sector in the economy.

While it’s not clear if Jeremy is part of the Taxed Out campaign, he has been a vocal critic of Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves.

During the final episode of Clarkson’s Farm season four, the Chancellor’s image briefly flashed on screen while Jeremy was criticising her incoming inheritance tax rules.

Clarkson has claimed that these new rules put the future of farming and food security in the UK at risk.

Metro has approached Jeremy Clarkson, Markus Campbell-Savours, and the Labour Party for comment.

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