Yorkshire Post

It’s destinatio­n doom with ‘Don’t Blame Me’ in charge

- Tom Richmond tom.richmond@ypn.co.uk

JUST two words illustrate why politician­s are so mistrusted by the public – Chris Grayling.

The fact that he became Transport Secretary speaks volumes about the calibre of the Tory party leadership.

And the longer Theresa May keeps him in place as the North’s rail network grinds to a halt, the more diminished the Prime Minister becomes.

After all, the transport network drives the national economy – and is intrinsic to the morale of the country.

If the trains fail to this extent, the impact on lives reflects poorly on the competence of the government of the day.

Yet Mr Grayling’s career has been going backwards from the day he was elevated to the post of Shadow Home Secretary by David Cameron, the then-Opposition leader, in 2009. It was a reward for Mr Grayling, then a clear communicat­or, being an effective Tory “attack dog” who pursued a succession of high-profile Labour politician­s when they became embroiled in sleaze scandals – how ironic that the hunter is now the hunted.

Yet the subsequent Parliament­ary expenses storm should have stopped Mr Grayling’s career in its tracks. It emerged he had claimed thousands for his London flat, including £4,250 for decorating work, £1,561 for a new bathroom and £1,527 for plumbing, when his family home was less than 20 miles from Westminste­r.

One of the Shadow Ministers ordered by Mr Cameron to repay some of this money, he attributed his financial arrangemen­ts to his erratic hours and cut a peripheral figure during the 2010 election and formation of the subsequent coalition, when Mr Cameron surprised many by giving Mrs May, his eventual successor, the Home Affairs brief.

Instead, Mr Grayling served as an abrasive Employment Minister before being elevated to the Cabinet as Justice Secretary in 2012. Even now, the legal profession shudder at how he was allowed to cut legal aid, dismantle the Probation Service, empower private firms to cut reoffendin­g and ban books from being sent to prisoners to help their literacy.

After the 2015 election, this “great survivor” became Leader of the Commons rather than being given a oneway ticket to the backbenche­s

He then mastermind­ed Mrs May’s leadership campaign in 2016. Many expected this loyalty to be rewarded with a great office of state – John Major, for example, made his leadership manager, Norman Lamont, Chancellor in 1990.

Yet Mr Grayling, a prominent Leave supporter in the EU referendum, had to settle for the seemingly innocuous transport brief. It begs the question why Mrs May – just like Mr Cameron in 2010 – baulked at giving her campaign chief a more high-profile role.

It was said that transport was always his preferred choice. However, Mr Grayling has demonstrat­ed few capabiliti­es and only Mrs May can explain why she did not shunt her colleague into the political sidings in the reshuffle that followed last year’s election – or the more recent shake-ups necessitat­ed by the resignatio­ns of Sir Michael Fallon, Priti Patel and Damian Green.

Keeping him in post smacks of political cowardice when the 56-year-old, who has twice accepted free hospitalit­y worth £300 from Manchester United this year according to the Register of Members’ Interests, is single-handedly destroying the Tory party’s credibilit­y in the North.

Travellers and taxpayers deserve better than a disingenuo­us Minister who implied during the election last year that the Government would electrify the Midland Main Line and other routes when the decision, according to the National Audit Office, had already been taken to scrap the schemes.

They also have a right to expect better from a Macavity-like politician who has tried to dodge responsibi­lity, avoid scrutiny and deflect blame from the moment he tried to dismiss the North’s needs and favour a second Crossrail line in London which, at a cost of £30bn, will benefit his Surrey constituen­ts. His planned meetings with MPs last night had to be cancelled – just like the trains – because he hadn’t enough time to accommodat­e everyone. It’s farcical.

And they need to know why Mr Grayling’s management was so poor that he allowed ruinous timetable changes to be introduced without checking if Network Rail engineerin­g was complete. Now, 165 daily services have been taken out of service until the end of July.

From Winston Churchill’s grandson Sir Nicholas Soames telling Mr Grayling about his “grave concern” over the inconvenie­nce being suffered by his Sussex constituen­ts to Lindsay Hoyle, Deputy Speaker of the Commons, challengin­g the Transport Secretary “to take control of the Northern Rail service with immediate effect”, politician­s are united in their condemnati­on.

As Mr Hoyle, a North-West MP, wrote: “The Government has placed huge emphasis on the value of the North of England, yet the much-vaunted powerhouse can never be taken seriously if people cannot travel by train.”

Given this, Mr Grayling’s “don’t blame me” letter to the area’s MPs last week – and the cancellati­on of scheduled meetings – has shown, once again, a cavalier contempt for the North which has culminated with today’s unpreceden­ted joint editorial by newspapers across the region calling for the Prime Minister to intervene.

If she does not, Theresa May must explain why she’s rewarding failure by keeping Mr Grayling in post and, at the same time, insulting rail passengers, betraying the North and bringing politics into disrepute. For, if this is the best she can do, Britain – and the rail network – is doomed.

The longer Theresa May keeps Chris Grayling in place as the North’s rail network grinds to a halt, the more diminished the Prime Minister becomes.

 ??  ?? Politician­s have been united in their condemnati­on of Transport Secretary Chris Grayling following ruinous railway timetable changes. NOWHERE FAST:
Politician­s have been united in their condemnati­on of Transport Secretary Chris Grayling following ruinous railway timetable changes. NOWHERE FAST:
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