Toby Helm and Daniel Boffey write:
Ed
Miliband has come
under pressure to bring the rail network back into national ownership if Labour wins
the next election, as more than 30 of his party's parliamentary candidates call
for a bold new policy to improve services and control train fares.
In a joint
letter to the Observer,
the prospective MPs – many of whom will fight in marginal seats where they say
the commuter vote could be crucial – argue that a policy of gradual
renationalisation would allow fares to be kept under control and profits to be
reinvested in services.
Their intervention comes as
radical options for the future of the rail network are being considered by
Labour's lengthy policy review, which is nearing completion.
It also coincides with a pledge
in the Observer by two
key figures in the Labour election team to present the most radical manifesto
in a generation.
While Miliband has said he is
interested in "innovative
solutions" for
the railways and is open to considering a greater degree of state control,
shadow chancellor Ed Balls is
said to be resistant to anything that would be portrayed by Labour's opponents
as anti-business or a lurch back to the pre-Thatcher era of nationalised
industries.
In their letter, the candidates
say a big move on rail ownership and fares could prove a vote-winner on
doorsteps, particularly in marginal seats in the south, which Labour must seize
if it is to win an overall majority.
They argue that under the present
franchising system, private companies can charge high fares and "walk away
with hundreds of millions of pounds every year, despite running monopoly services
and benefiting from £4bn of public investment in the rail network every
year".
Instead, they want to extend the
system of national ownership that has operated successfully on the East Coast main line
since 2009, when the franchise run by National Express failed, and
bring all franchises under state control as they come free.
"A commitment to extend this
successful model to the rest of the rail network, as existing contracts come to
an end, would mean that hundreds of millions currently lost in private profit
would be available to fully fund a bold offer on rail fares," they say.
The letter, which shows the
pressure Miliband is under to deliver more eye-catching policies in areas
ranging from health to childcare, goes on: "Labour's response to this
should be to offer a fairer deal to commuters as a part of Ed Miliband's
response to the cost of living crisis.
"Just as Labour has pledged
to freeze energy bills and reset the market to secure a better deal for
customers, so it will be necessary to reform the rail industry to secure a
better deal for passengers."
On Saturday night one of the
signatories, Nancy Platts, who is seeking to overturn a 1,300 Tory majority in
Brighton Kemptown, said:
"If I can have some concrete
policies to sell on the doorsteps, that will make a big difference. Rail fares
are a huge issue here and in other commuter areas. For many people who have to
buy a season ticket, they are like a second mortgage. Changing the way we run
the rail system is an issue of fairness."
An Opinium/Observer poll on
the future of rail shows that more than three times as many people back some
form of renationalisation of rail services (55%) as oppose it (18%).
When the idea of bringing
franchises back under national control as they fall free was put to voters,
three times as many Tory voters (60%) backed the idea as opposed it (20%).
Among Labour voters 71% were in favour and 8% against.
Writing in the Observer with exactly a year to go until the
general election, the chair of the party's election strategy, Douglas
Alexander, and campaign co-ordinator, Spencer Livermore, pledge that Labour
will deliver "the boldest, most radical, offer in a generation" to
the British people to address living standards.
After a week in which the party
announced it would intervene
in the housing market by
putting a ceiling on the amount by which private landlords can raise rents,
they say markets must be made to work for those facing cost of living
pressures.
"It is a crisis that demands
we reform the market, while the fiscal problems we will inherit mean we must be
reformers of the state too," they write.
Last a week a group of more than
40 Labour MPs met in the House of Commons to discuss Labour policy on rail, and
backed steps to bring the system back under a greater degree of state control.
The left-of-centre pressure group Compass is also preparing to launch a campaign
pushing for franchises to be brought back under state ownership with more
transparency and accountability built into the system.
On Sunday, Miliband is expected
to raise concerns about the planned takeover of UK drugs firm AstraZeneca by US
rival Pfizer, increasing pressure for action to ensure British companies are
not left at the mercy of predators by firms from overseas.
On Saturday former Labour trade minister Lord Davies warned that British business could suffer if "top industries" were left vulnerable to bids. He said: "I do wonder whether this deal is more about financial engineering rather than industrial logic."
On Saturday former Labour trade minister Lord Davies warned that British business could suffer if "top industries" were left vulnerable to bids. He said: "I do wonder whether this deal is more about financial engineering rather than industrial logic."
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