Rishi Sunak accused of ‘cancelling the future’
with climbdown over HS2
Anger over scrapping of Manchester leg of
infrastructure projects risks derailing Tory party conference
Kiran
Stacey, Gwyn Topham , Helen Pidd and Pippa Crerar
Mon 2 Oct
2023 19.44 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/oct/02/hs2-rishi-sunak-scrapping-manchester-leg
Rishi Sunak
has become embroiled in a bitter row with regional politicians, the transport
industry and members of his own party as he prepared to announce the
cancellation of the multibillion high speed rail line to Manchester.
The prime
minister is due to call an emergency cabinet meeting on Tuesday at the
Conservative party conference in Manchester, where ministers are expected to
give their approval to the biggest infrastructure climbdown in a generation.
As leaked
details of the U-turn threatened to derail the conference, Sunak came under
fire from politicians and business executives, who accused him of abandoning
the government’s commitment to levelling up.
Some of the
most vocal criticism came from Andy Street, the Conservative mayor for the West
Midlands, who told reporters the prime minister was in danger of “cancelling
the future”.
Speaking
from the entrance of the hotel where Sunak is staying, Street said: “This has
become a debate about Britain’s ability to do the tough stuff successfully, as
previous generations of Britons certainly did. And of course now it’s become a
debate about Britain’s credibility as a place to invest.”
Henri
Murison, the chief executive of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership, said: “It
is madness to leave what was meant to be the UK’s flagship infrastructure
project like this. Unless we can protect the hybrid bill, which is currently
going through parliament and which authorises the tunnel between Manchester and
Manchester airport, this means the end for Northern Powerhouse Rail and
levelling up as a whole is finished.”
The row
added to what has been a difficult start to the conference for the prime
minister, who also saw his predecessor Liz Truss steal the limelight during a
packed fringe event at which she called for immediate and sweeping tax cuts.
Conservative
advisers are aware of how it will look to have the prime minister announce the
cancellation of a train line to Manchester from a former train station in
Manchester.
However
Sunak has been pushed into making a faster announcement than he had planned
after speculation about the future of HS2 dominated the first day and a half of
the conference.
The prime
minister has spent weeks re-examining the case for the project after costs
ballooned to at least £71bn as measured in 2019 prices, and will frame his
decision as evidence that he is willing to take unpopular decisions for the
long-term interest of the country.
During that
process however he has failed to consult some of those at the heart of the
project, including leaders of HS2 Ltd, the company that is in charge of
implementing it.
Sunak could
even announce that the high-speed line will end on the outskirts of London,
with trains stopping at Old Oak Common rather than six miles east at Euston,
with some of the savings spent on alternative transport schemes for the north.
Reports on Monday evening, however, suggested the line will terminate in
Euston. Under the original plans the line would end at Old Oak Common until a
new station at Euston opens, and it remains unclear if that timescale has
changed.
Some in
government have suggested using the money on an east-west rail link instead,
although plans for a high-speed line between Liverpool and Hull depend on some
of the HS2 infrastructure being in place first.
Andy
Burnham, the Labour mayor for Greater Manchester, said on Monday: “If you scrap
HS2, you are scrapping the possibility of a new east-west line across the north
of England any time soon. We will not accept vague commitments about improving
east-west links – we really won’t – because people here have waited far too
long for a functional railway and we are not going to sell our own residents
down the river.”
Darren
Caplan, the chief executive of the Railway Industry Association, said: “This
constant salami-slicing of the scheme betrays HS2’s original purpose to improve
the UK’s connectivity and economy, while enabling added capacity to the classic
network and helping the government deliver on its net zero targets. A decision
to cancel would also send a terrible message about the UK’s ability to deliver
major infrastructure projects to international investors.”
Andy
Bagnall, chief executive of Rail Partners, said scrapping the Manchester leg
“will send a shock wave through the rail industry, its supply chain and all
those with a stake in the project, including the northern communities it would
have served”.
The
decision is part of a broader reset by Sunak as he tries to halt his party’s
slide in the polls before a likely election next year. Last month he announced
he was pushing back some of the government’s net zero commitments, including
the deadline to phase out the sale of new petrol and diesel cars.
That
announcement appears to have helped the Tories narrow Labour’s poll lead, which
now stands at about 16 percentage points. However, the HS2 decision threatens
to prove more controversial, especially among northern voters who helped
deliver the Conservative majority in 2019.
Conservative
ministers spent much of Monday trying to shore up support among their rightwing
support base with a series of pledges to overturn regulations that do not
really exist.
Thérèse
Coffey resurrected one of the oldest rows over Brussels red tape when she
promised to cancel rules on “bendy bananas”. Mark Harper promised to stop local
councils deciding how often residents can go to the shops, without being able
to name a single council which is doing so.
In one of
the more substantial policy announcements, the chancellor, Jeremy Hunt,
announced the government would reduce the size of the civil service by 66,000
to pre-pandemic levels. He did not say how long that process would take.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário