, 10 January 2024 On 18 December 2023, the German Farmers' Association called for a demonstration with
tractors under the slogan "Too much is too much! Now it's over!" in
Berlin. Around 6,600 people gathered at a rally in front of the
Brandenburg Gate. Farmers' president Joachim Rukwied called for agricultural subsidies to be maintained. Similar protests took place in other cities in Germany, including
Freiburg,
Leipzig, and
Chemnitz. Public attention of the protests increased when on 4 January 2024, a group of 100 farmers alongside other protesters blocked the Hilligenlei
ferry in the port of Schlüttsiel in
North Frisia, in which then-Federal Minister of Economics
Robert Habeck and his wife were on their way back from a private day trip. After the demonstrators declined Habeck's offer to send a small delegation on the ferry, and he refused to address the crowd personally for reasons of privacy, the ferry set sail again. The call to gather at the ferry was spread along by forces such as a former member of the
AfD who learned about Habeck's day trip plans, as well as the group "Freie Schleswig-Holsteiner" (Free Schleswig-Holsteiners). Individual protests across the country continued throughout the beginning of January, with a collective, coordinated blockage of several
highway access roads with rallies throughout Germany taking place on 8 January, the beginning of the protesters' week of action. This led to the Workers’ Welfare Association filing a criminal complaint due to employees, patients and deliveries being unable to reach the AWO hospital in
Jerichow. The week of action, as well as the following weeks, saw a significant increase in the size of the demonstrations, with thousands of protesters and tractors gathering in major cities such as
Dresden,
Kassel,
Düsseldorf,
Hannover,
Hamburg,
Kiel, and Leipzig, where they protested alongside
Fridays for Future. Central warehouses of food discounters throughout Germany were also blocked with tractors as part of the protests. In
Cottbus, Brandenburg's Minister President
Dietmar Woidke (
SPD) declared his full support for the farmers' demands to cancel the tax increases. On the night of 15 January, farmers, hauliers, tradespeople and civilians gathered in Berlin in front of the Brandenburg gate for a large demonstration. Over 6,000 tractors were brought to block the city centre with a rally, and estimates on the amount of protesters vary between 8,500 from police reports and over 30,000 from reports of the organisers. The demonstration was largely peaceful. The then-Federal Finance Minister
Christian Lindner (
FDP) attempted to give a speech and declared that the government would not deviate from its plans to raise taxes. At the same time, at 12 noon, the German
Bundestag's petitions committee began hearing a petition for the cancellation of subsidy cuts, based on an official digital petition with over 75,000 signatures. Previously, over 1.1 million citizens had already shown their support on a similar digital petition on
change.org. == Public reactions ==