Western Daily Press

Labour’s rail nationalis­ation vow

- HELEN CORBETT wdp@reachplc.com

LABOUR will pledge to renational­ise the railways if elected, in what the party will call the “biggest overhaul to our railways in a generation.”

A Labour government would expect to transfer rail networks to public ownership within its first term by folding existing private passenger rail contracts into a new body as they expire, shadow transport secretary Louise Haigh will say at a launch event today.

The plan will nationalis­e the network “without the taxpayer paying a penny in compensati­on costs”, the party will say.

The Government’s own proposals for rail reform, published in a draft Bill in February, include the creation of a new public sector body named Great British Railways (GBR) to hold responsibi­lity for rail infrastruc­ture and awarding contracts to operate trains.

But a Labour government would create a “unified, publicly owned, accountabl­e and arm’s length” version of GBR led by rail experts rather than Whitehall, Ms Haigh will say.

Labour also plans to establish a watchdog, the Passenger Standards Authority, to hold GBR to account.

Ms Haigh will say: “With Labour’s bold reforms, a publicly owned railway will be single-mindedly focused on delivering for passengers and will be held to account on delivering reliable, safe, efficient, accessible, affordable and quality services.

“Labour’s detailed plans will get our railways back on track; driving up standards for passengers, bringing down costs for taxpayers, driving growth and getting Britain moving.”

The Government estimated in its 2021 reform plan that it could save £1.5 billion annually after five years by ending inefficien­cy and fragmentat­ion.

Labour says, citing its own analysis, that transition­ing to public ownership could save money by cutting out franchise bidding costs, reducing the duplicatio­n of resources and lessening friction between operators.

The party also plans to bring in automatic delay and cancellati­on refunds, make digital season tickets available on all networks, and make timetables, tickets and fares more integrated. It also proposes moving mobile service on trains towards 5G and improving the integratio­n of rail travel with bus and cycle hire services.

The Government’s reform plans were based on recommenda­tions from a review carried out by former British Airways chief executive Keith Williams.

Mr Williams said of Labour’s plans: “I welcome Labour’s intention, if they are elected, to take forward the substance of my recommenda­tions to deliver a better railway for passengers and freight by creating a rail body with an integrated profit and loss account, at arm’s length from government.”

Mick Whelan, general secretary of Aslef, said: “We have seen more positivity in this stunning Labour Party vision for rail than anything at any time from the Tories during their failed privatisat­ion and subsequent incoherent rail reform programme.

“The Labour commitment delivers for the economy, for the taxpayer, for passengers, and for staff.”

Andy Bagnall, chief executive at Rail Partners, an industry group of train operators and freight groups, said: “Train companies agree that change is needed for the railways, but nationalis­ation is a political rather than a practical solution which will increase costs over time.”

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