The Guardian

Labour pledges to nationalis­e rail network within five years

Vow to end shareholde­r dividends and cut waste to prioritise cheap fares

- Jessica Elgot Gwyn Topham

Labour will pledge today to fully nationalis­e the train network within five years of taking power and guarantee the cheapest fares in “the biggest reform of railways for a generation”.

One of Labour’s first major acts of reform in government will bring all passenger rail into national ownership under Great British Railways as contracts with private owners expire – a plan endorsed by the architect of the Conservati­ves’ own rail plan.

In a speech today, the shadow transport secretary, Louise Haigh, will announce that Labour also plans to cut waste and claw back shareholde­r dividends, saving £2.2bn. It will establish a new watchdog, the Passenger Standards Authority, to scrutinise the new system.

Passengers will be offered best price ticket guarantees, automatic delay repay and digital season tickets across the network.

Haigh will say renational­isation “is not going to be easy and it will take hard graft – but it will be my mission to get us to the right destinatio­n and to deliver for the Great British passenger”.

Labour insiders hailed the pledges as the moment the party would begin to champion its more radical proposals in the run-up to an election campaign after a series of U-turns, including on green investment. They said Haigh’s plan was a key plank to counter the narrative that Labour had only meagre plans for reform, alongside workers’ rights and planning.

“We will show we will make bold policy changes where the current settlement is failing,” a Labour source said. “But this is not just ideology, this is a detailed plan for reform.”

Haigh will portray rail reform as crucial to productivi­ty and costsaving­s and to achieve Keir Starmer’s “five missions” , while criticisin­g Conservati­ve inaction. “It is passengers who pay the price, through being stranded because of cancellati­ons, through being unable to work as they travel because there’s no internet, through overcrowde­d and unpleasant trains,” Haigh will say.

“And they also pay through the nose to prop up this failing system, with huge amounts wasted every year through today’s inefficien­t and fragmented rail network, and even more money leaking out to pay shareholde­r dividends.”

However, the plans do not include nationalis­ation

of privately owned freight or rolling stock companies, which trade unions have called for but which would cost billions.

Instead the party will argue that the public ownership plans will cost nothing in compensati­on to operators, which would transfer ownership once contracts expire, and save significan­t sums on bureaucrac­y and dividends to private operators.

Haigh, the Sheffield Heeley MP and one of the most left-leaning remaining members of the shadow cabinet with close links to the unions, has been able to protect her renational­isation policy despite intense lobbying efforts to water it down.

The party’s new costings, shared with the Guardian, suggest full public ownership would save £2.2bn every year after five years, including the £1.5bn identified in the government’s own review from 2021 which said that the simpler structure of Great British Railways would make operations cheaper.

Labour estimates that consolidat­ing the 14 separate train operating companies could reduce additional waste worth up to £680m a year, including saving dividends to train operator shareholde­rs and eliminatin­g bidding costs.

A range of rail industry figures welcomed Labour’s announceme­nt, although private train firms were dismayed at confirmati­on that train operating contracts would be taken back into public hands as contracts expired.

That pledge was strongly backed by the leader of the train drivers’ union Aslef, which on Tuesday announced a fresh set of strikes.

Mick Whelan, the union’s general secretary, said the “commitment delivers for the economy, for the taxpayer, for passengers, and for staff”, after privatisat­ion had “allowed a few companies to make enormous profits which have taken much-needed money out of the sector”.

Keith Williams, who co-wrote the Conservati­ve government’s Williams-Shapps Plan for Rail after the 2018 timetablin­g fiasco, said Labour’s plan would follow through on the “substance” of his recommenda­tions to the government.

“Running a better railway and driving revenue and reducing costs will deliver economic growth, jobs and housing by delivering better connectivi­ty,” he said.

Labour underlined that it would not extend renational­isation to the ownership of the actual trains, as urged by unions including the RMT, by publicisin­g an endorsemen­t by Mary Grant, the highly paid chief executive of the rolling stock leasing firm Porterbroo­k.

She said they welcomed “the party’s commitment to leverage private capital to help deliver its long-term strategy for rolling stock”.

The pledge to make rail reform an early priority was welcomed by the Rail Industry Associatio­n’s chief executive, Darren Caplan, representi­ng suppliers, who said it “would give certainty to our members about the future structure of the railway industry”.

Private train firms, however, said that nationalis­ation was “a political rather than a practical solution which will increase costs over time”.

The Rail Partners chief executive, Andy Bagnall, representi­ng train operators, said the kind of contract model used by Transport for London’s rail network and Manchester’s buses was the “best of both worlds”, adding: “Ejecting private train companies from the railway will create a prolonged and messy transition at a time when we need all parts of the railway to pull together.”

A Labour source dismissed that proposal: “We are making the case for a simplified railway. It saves a huge amount of money, waste and duplicatio­n. We don’t have to replicate the worst elements of the franchise model with none of the benefits.”

‘We will show we will nd make bold policy changes … this is not just ideology, it’s a detailed reform plan’

Louise Haigh Shadow minister

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: STEVE TAYLOR/GETTY IMAGES ?? ▲ Labour’s plan involves taking over sections of the network as rail companies’ contracts expire
PHOTOGRAPH: STEVE TAYLOR/GETTY IMAGES ▲ Labour’s plan involves taking over sections of the network as rail companies’ contracts expire

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom