Nationalise Liberty Steel to save 5,000 vital jobs, urges Miliband
THE GOVERNMENT should consider nationalising Liberty Steel if necessary to save thousands of “crucial jobs”, Ed Miliband has said.
Liberty’s future is the subject of speculation after specialist bank Greensill Capital went into administration.
Greensill Capital was the main lender to Sanjeev Gupta’s GFG Alliance, which includes Liberty Steel, the owner of steel plants across the UK.
Mr Gupta’s business empire employs around 5,000 people in the UK, the majority of whom work for Liberty Steel across its 11 sites in England, Scotland and Wales, including Scunthorpe, Newport and Rotherham.
Speaking to the BBC, the Shadow Business Secretary and Doncaster North MP said the Government needed to explore every option to keep the company afloat, including nationalisation.
He told the broadcaster: “These are crucial jobs for communities up and down this country.
“Let’s hope that Liberty Steel can find the refinancing that it’s looking for but the Government needs a Plan B to make sure whatever happens these jobs are saved.
“If there’s one lesson we learned from this pandemic it’s that our strategic infrastructure, our resilience, really matters. Steel is a key part of our strategic infrastructure and resilience.
“We cannot afford to let these jobs go. Government has got to make sure it doesn’t happen.”
Downing Street said the Government was continuing to work with unions and the firm. The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “We continue to monitor developments on that front and we are engaging closely with the company and trade unions.”
Speaking to The Times, the Business Secretary, Kwasi Kwarteng, hinted that the Government could intervene in the crisis. He said: “We have done in the past. I think Liberty Steel is consonant with our decarbonisation agenda. I think it’s a fundamentally good product. I can’t anticipate or guarantee forms of intervention.”