'Seasonal migrants for farms would still work in a 'Brexit' UK, but with controls' says Boris

Boris Johnson, one of the lead Brexit campaigners
Boris Johnson, one of the lead Brexit campaigners

Leaving the EU would not harm Yorkshire’s farming industry, Boris Johnson has insisted in a visit to the county.

Workers from Eastern Europe who work on the region’s farms number several thousand and in Yorkshire and the Humber there are 179,000 EU-born nationals, according to the Office for National Statistics.

On filling gaps in the labour market if EU migrant numbers are slashed, Mr Johnson told the Yorkshire Post: "You could get EU workers and get people from other European countries. They could continue to come, but there would be control."

He said: "If the agricultural sector said we need seasonal labour then that would be something immigration authorities would take into account. Of course you would do that."

"We had lots of seasonal workers on our farm in Somerset. We had workers from European countries, years and years ago when I was a kid.

"There is no reason why that shouldn’t continue but what we are saying is you would be able to set controls."

He said EU migrants were preferable to employers from outside Europe because they do not require visas.

Last night Mr Johnson addressed a Vote Leave rally at York Racecourse.