Daily Mail

Labour: We’ll put workers on boards of power firms

- By Policy Editor

LABOUR will today set out radical plans to put workers on the boards of nationalis­ed industries.

John McDonnell will unveil plans to begin the process of nationalis­ing water and energy companies within the first 100 days of a Labour government.

The Shadow Chancellor will outline how each nationalis­ed company will be governed by a board containing four elected worker representa­tives.

The boards will also consist of elected politician­s, four ‘citizen representa­tives’ and just three non-executive directors chosen by the company itself.

Mr McDonnell will say: ‘In our first 100 days we will start the process of bringing water and energy into public ownership. We’ll set up boards to run them made of you, the customer, and you, the worker, as well as representa­tives from local councils, metro mayors and others.

‘We’ll make sure decisions are taken locally by those who understand the services – those who use them and deliver them.’

As well as water and energy firms, Labour has outlined plans to nationalis­e rail companies, the royal Mail and openreach, the broadband arm of british Telecom.

Last night a report from the Institute of Economic Affairs think-tank, said calls to bring key utilities under state control ‘ignore important lessons’ from the postwar period. one of the authors, Professor Len Shackleton, said: ‘The public’s dissatisfa­ction with some aspects of the performanc­e of privatised utilities should not lead us to forget the lessons of decades under nationalis­ation.

‘Taking these industries back into the public sector would reduce consumer choice and innovation, while holding back productivi­ty and boosting the power of trade unions and other unrepresen­tative pressure groups.’ Another think-tank, the

Institute for Fiscal Studies, warned last week that the plans could cost billions, could be hugely disruptive – and could hit pensions funds if the owners were not properly compensate­d.

‘Cut consumer choice and boost union power’

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