Louise Haigh (Sheffield, Heeley) (Lab) (Urgent Question): To ask
the Secretary of State for Transport if he will make a statement on
the planned route and delivery of High Speed Rail 2. The
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport (Mr Richard
Holden) Before I begin, I would like to pay tribute to my hon.
Friend and neighbour the Member for Bishop Auckland (Dehenna
Davison) for her service in government, and to congratulate my hon.
Friends the Members for...Request free
trial
(Sheffield, Heeley) (Lab)
(Urgent Question): To ask the Secretary of State for Transport if
he will make a statement on the planned route and delivery of
High Speed Rail 2.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport ( )
Before I begin, I would like to pay tribute to my hon. Friend and
neighbour the Member for Bishop Auckland () for her service in
government, and to congratulate my hon. Friends the Members for
Redcar () and for South West
Hertfordshire () on their elevation.
Spades are already in the ground for HS2 and we remain focused on
its delivery. The Minister for rail and HS2, the Minister of
State, Department for Transport, my hon. Friend the Member for
Bexhill and Battle (), is in the Czech Republic today to sign a
memorandum of understanding with the Czech Government and
tomorrow he will be in Poland to attend TRAKO, supporting UK rail
supply chain companies at a major European rail trade fair. For
that reason, I am responding on behalf of the Government.
Construction continues in earnest, with about 350 active
construction sites, and we are getting on with delivery, with
high-speed rail services between London and Birmingham Curzon
Street due to commence in 2033, with the re-scoped stages
following. This will specifically drive the regeneration of 1,600
acres, delivering 40,000 homes and supporting 65,000 jobs in
outer London. The benefits of HS2 for Birmingham are already
being realised; the area around Curzon Street station is already
becoming a focal point for transformation, development and
economic growth. The Government provide regular six-monthly
reports on HS2 to the House, and we will continue to keep the
House updated on the project.
Thank you very much, Mr Speaker, for granting the urgent
question, but if the rail Minister is not available, you would
think that the Secretary of State would be bothered to turn up to
the House on an issue of this importance.
Here we are yet again: 13 years of gross mismanagement and chaos
coming home to roost. First, the Government slashed Northern
Powerhouse Rail; then they binned HS2 to Leeds; then they
announced that the line would terminate at Old Oak Common for
years to come; and now it looks as though they are considering
cutting the north of England out in its entirety. If that is
true, what are we left with? We are left with the Tories’
flagship levelling-up project that reaches neither the north of
England, nor central London: the most expensive railway track in
the world, which, thanks to terminating in Acton, will mean a
longer journey between Birmingham and central London than the one
passengers currently enjoy. What started out as a modern
infrastructure plan, left by the last Labour Government, linking
our largest northern cities will, after 13 years of Tory
incompetence, waste and broken promises, have turned into a
humiliating Conservative failure; a great rail betrayal—£45
billion and the least possible economic impact from the original
plan, £45 billion and the north left with nothing. But frankly,
what else would we expect from a Prime Minister who does not
travel through the north of England on rail? He only ever flies
over it. Today, communities and businesses do not need yet more
speculation and rumour from the heart of this broken
Government—they need answers.
Will the Minister urgently explain if the photograph leaked last
Friday reflects his Government’s position to slash phase 2
altogether? Will he confirm the commitment his boss made in this
House just a few months ago that high-speed trains will reach
Manchester by 2014? Are his Government planning for trains to
terminate at Old Oak Common for good, detonating the business
case and overwhelming the Elizabeth line? Having run our economy,
our public services and our railways into the ground, will the
country not now conclude that this is proof, once and for all,
that the Tories can never be trusted to run our country
again?
Mr Holden
In response to the hon. Lady’s question, the Secretary of State
is on urgent ministerial business with other Government
Departments.
At the Department for Transport, we were delighted to see the
hon. Lady survive the recent shadow Cabinet reshuffle, albeit she
appears to be shadow Secretary of State for Transport in name
only, as that job now appears to be covered by the right hon.
Member for Wolverhampton South East (Mr McFadden). Even the
Liberal Democrats caught the hon. Lady napping this morning by
putting in their urgent question request before she did.
Only yesterday, the right hon. Member for Wolverhampton South
East said on “Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg”:
“I want to see what this costs and we’ll make those decisions
when it comes to the manifesto.”
That came only two days after a leaked Labour party policy
document said that the Opposition are committed to
“deliver Northern Powerhouse Rail and High Speed 2 in full”.
There was no mention of how they will pay for that combined £140
billion spending commitment—same old Labour. While the shadow
Chancellor tries to talk up Labour’s “ironclad discipline”, the
hon. Member for Sheffield, Heeley () goes around the country,
promising hundreds of billions of pounds of unfunded spending on
rail alone.
We cannot trust a word they say on transport spending,
immigration or housing. All have unravelled over the last week,
as the Labour party says one thing and does another: on
immigration, an open door for Europe’s illegal immigration; on
housing, backing the blockers not the builders. [Interruption.]
This House will remember the report by the Institute for Fiscal
Studies back in May—
Mr Speaker
Order. I granted the urgent question so we could hear the answer,
so less shouting. Carry on, Minister.
Mr Holden
The House will remember the report by the IFS in May, when its
director said that it was hard to see how the Labour party could
bring forward any further policy without tax rises, and that
Labour’s plans would increase inflation and drive up interest
rates. But this Government, under this Prime Minister, have made
it a priority to halve inflation by the end of the year. That is
why I am proud that buses have introduced a £2 fare to help
hard-working families with the cost of living, which the Labour
party has not done during the 25 years it has been in charge in
Wales.
This Government are getting on with delivering on rail. We have
delivered 1,200 miles of electrification over the last 13 years,
compared to a pathetic 63 miles under the 13 years of the last
Labour Government.
There is more to public transport than trains. Over the last 10
months, I have been around the country supporting new road
schemes funded by this Government, from the A303 to the Preston
western distributor road. Some £500 million has been invested to
protect bus services across the country, while we have delivered
on our commitment for 4,000 zero-emission buses. Last week, I
announced new funding for HGV truck stops; meanwhile, Labour has
expanded ULEZ in London and banned road building in Wales, as
well as putting a 20-mile-an-hour speed limit right across that
place. [Interruption.] I am proud that this Government are—
Mr Speaker
Order. The Minister could have made a statement. I did not have
to grant the urgent question, so please bring statements
forward—I will always support you.
Mr Holden
I am proud that this Government are unashamedly on the side of
the taxpayer, checking the impact on the motorist, HGV drivers
and bus passengers of every single policy that is put forward.
Ministers will continue to keep the House updated regularly on
HS2, as we have done today.
Mr Speaker
I call the Chair of the Transport Committee.
(Milton Keynes South)
(Con)
While one should always take with a pinch of salt newspaper
speculation in advance of budgets as to what may or may not be in
them, may I put on record that if what has been reported is true,
it would be an enormous false economy? Whether people support or
oppose HS2 in principle, starting at Old Oak Common and finishing
at Birmingham would not realise the full benefits of the line and
communities will have been enormously impacted for no great
benefit. Old Oak Common does not have the capacity to handle all
the services and just a couple of weeks ago Network Rail, in its
West Coast South strategic advice, noted that even with HS2 to
Manchester, the west coast mainline will not have the capacity in
the decades to come. Will my hon. Friend take the message to the
Treasury to either do it properly or not to do it at all?
Mr Holden
I thank the Chair of the Transport Committee for his comments. I
shall certainly take that message away with me.
Mr Speaker
I call the SNP spokesperson.
(Paisley and Renfrewshire
North) (SNP)
I hope the Minister has had time to calm down and perhaps take a
breath after that astonishing performance. In attacking Labour on
costs, he seems to be admitting what we all know, which is that
phase 2 is an utter shambles—financially, operationally and
politically. First, it was the north-east and Yorkshire that were
let down by this Government on HS2. Now it seems to be the turn
of the north-west, let alone Scotland and Wales. In a similar
timeframe to that of HS2, Spain has managed to install 624 km of
high speed rail for a fraction of the cost. This includes tunnels
and bridges through far rougher terrain than that which HS2
passes through. Since June 2018, 233 kilometres of this track has
come into operational use. What we have is a gold-plated commuter
line of just 100 miles between two cities on the south of this
island costing nearly £50 billion, while the rest of the country
is expected to fight for scraps from the table. When was Transport Secretary he
gave commitments on HS2 infrastructure reaching Scotland, but
that infrastructure is barely getting to the midlands. Can the
Minister tell me in which decade HS2 infrastructure will actually
get anywhere near Scotland? How does any further cancellation,
postponement or watering down of HS2 commitments fit with the
so-called levelling-up strategy and when will Wales receive its
rightful share of Barnett consequentials?
Mr Holden
I thank the Member for his question. As he will know, this
Government have delivered more than 1,200 miles of
electrification—over 20 times the amount delivered in the 13
years of the last Labour Government. I would also say to him
that, just last week, I met my third Scottish Transport Minister
in 10 months and they did not mention HS2 at all.
Mr Speaker
I call the Chair of the High Speed Rail Bill Committee.
(Brigg and Goole) (Con)
It should not surprise people that building a high-speed railway
line on a very small island through large, populated areas with
lots of infrastructure was always going to be complex and
expensive—that should be a surprise to nobody. If these decisions
are taking place, may I ask my hon. Friend to remind his
colleagues in the Treasury that HS2 also delivers important
connectivity infrastructure for Northern Powerhouse Rail,
connecting Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds, and, perhaps the
greatest city of the north, Hull. I urge him to remind his
colleagues who may be looking at this of that important fact.
Mr Holden
I thank my hon. Friend and other colleagues for the work that
they did on the Select Committee. I will, of course, take that
message back to Treasury colleagues.
(Blackley and Broughton)
(Lab)
Will the Minister give an unambiguous answer to this question: is
this Government still committed to building HS2 to Manchester
from Euston? People in the north need to know whether they are
being abandoned, because it looks like that to me from press
reports, which have not been made up by journalists. Is it not
the case that the Minister is fronting a Government who will not
dare tell the electorate that they are abandoning the north?
Mr Holden
There is no question of this Government abandoning the north. We
have put in huge amounts of funding, including on buses and new
roads. I was in Preston a few weeks ago to open the new Preston
Western Distributor road. The Government are hugely investing in
the north of England—on rail, on roads, and indeed on our
important bus network. As I said earlier, Ministers will continue
to update the House regularly on HS2, as we have done
throughout.
(Buckingham) (Con)
Even when this project had arms and legs and eyebrows going
across the whole country, it was always accepted that the
business case was very weak and that, as a nation, we cannot
really afford it. I hope the Government do scrap HS2 north of
Birmingham and save many more communities from the human misery
that my constituents endure every day of the week from the
construction. If they do scrap it, it would leave the quite
literally legless stump from outside central London to outside
central Birmingham. Will my hon. Friend take the message back to
his colleagues and to the Treasury that we cannot afford it and
that what is left of phase 1 should be scrapped as well.
Mr Holden
I thank my hon. Friend for his question. Spades are already in
the ground for HS2, with over 350 active construction sites, and
with high-speed services between London and Birmingham Curzon
Street due to start between 2029 and 2033. However, I will pass
on his comments to Treasury colleagues, as always.
(Warley) (Lab)
Frankly, it is a real shame that we have to put up with an
ill-prepared office junior instead of the boss, because these are
really significant decisions. Let us be clear: the case for HS2
was always flawed, but ballooning construction costs and changing
business travel patterns post covid now make it unsustainable. I
understand that it would be hugely embarrassing for the
Government, and for the Minister’s Department, to write off
somewhere between 10 billion and 15 billion quid, but surely that
is better than spending £100 billion on this ill-fated
project.
Mr Holden
I thank the right hon. Member for his thoughts; I will take them
back to Government.
Dame (South Northamptonshire)
(Con)
My constituents have been through absolute misery for 13 years
now, ever since the hybrid Bill first started and they tried to
defend their own area. Unfortunately, HS2 has not provided
continuity of support, has not provided good customer liaison and
has not provided proper compensation. People have been made
miserable, and their mental health has been severely damaged by
this project. They deserve the right answer: is this project
going ahead or is it not? My constituency looks like an
industrial site right now.
Mr Holden
I thank my right hon. Friend for her question. Spades are already
in the ground for HS2, as she well knows, and we are focusing on
its delivery. There are already over 350 active construction
sites right across the country, including in her constituency. It
is going ahead.
(Bath) (LD)
HS2 faces death by a thousand cuts. We Liberal Democrats are
firmly behind HS2, but the Government’s catastrophic handling of
the project’s delivery has meant that the Infrastructure and
Projects Authority now rates it as “unachievable”. What will the
Government do to fix this mess?
Mr Holden
I find it very interesting that the hon. Lady says that the
Liberal Democrats are firmly behind HS2, because that is not what
their candidate for Mid Bedfordshire said earlier today, or what
the hon. Member for Chesham and Amersham () said just a few months
ago.
(Stone) (Con)
We had a meeting about HS2 with the Minister of State, my hon.
Friend the Member for Bexhill and Battle (), a few weeks ago. It was a very good meeting, led
by myself and other Members of Parliament, and various options
were put forward. I pay tribute to Trevor Parkin in my
constituency for all his work on the matter.
Can we have a straight answer about this white elephant? Will
there be a continuation of the line from Birmingham to
Manchester, or not? Will the Minister be good enough to let us
have a proper analysis, in line with all the reports that have
come out showing that, unless the entire project is radically
changed or scrapped, it will continue to be a white elephant?
People in my constituency have been suffering for far too long,
to no good purpose.
Mr Holden
I am glad that my hon. Friend has had great engagement on the
issue from the Department and from the rail Minister. As I have
said, Ministers will continue to keep the House updated regarding
HS2, as they have been doing. I am sure that when the rail
Minister returns he will be happy to have further such
conversations with my hon. Friend.
(Birmingham, Hodge Hill)
(Lab)
When will High Speed 2 arrive in Manchester?
Mr Holden
Ministers will continue to keep the House updated regularly
regarding HS2, as they have done to date. As we all know, the
first stages are set to be completed by 2033, linking London with
Birmingham.
(Cleethorpes) (Con)
As a member of the Bill Committee, I have had the good fortune to
visit a number of sites involved in the construction of HS2, so I
appreciate what a major project it is and how many people are
involved. Companies up and down the country are reliant on the
project for the continuation of their business. The future of
hundreds of jobs and businesses depends on it. Can the Minister
give an assurance that that will be taken into full consideration
in discussions with the Treasury?
Mr Holden
I can certainly give my hon. Friend that assurance. There are
thousands of people working on site at the moment, with more than
350 construction sites up and down the country, and companies
will be updated. Even from today this project will last well into
the 2030s, if not beyond, so those construction jobs will be
secure for a long time.
(Kingston upon Hull North)
(Lab)
The Minister said that the Government are hugely investing in the
north. For Hull, the decade of northern powerhouse saw a
privately financed scheme to electrify our railways blocked by
Ministers in 2016 and, in the Government’s 2021 integrated rail
plan, blocked for the next 30 years. Funding apparently was
needed for Northern Powerhouse Rail and HS2, which are now being
cut. Levelling up is not just about being nice to northerners; it
is about boosting an essential part of the UK economy. Am I right
in thinking that in these ever-shrinking plans we are just seeing
the economics of mismanaged decline and an inbuilt vicious circle
of stagnation under this Government that is affecting the
north?
Mr Holden
I remember using Northern Rail under the last Labour Government,
which had a zero investment strategy for the railway network in
the entire north of England. This Government have already
delivered more than 1,200 miles of electrification, 20 times what
the right hon. Lady’s party did when they were in government. She
should also look at the huge amount of investment we have put
into bus networks right across the country, including in
Yorkshire, over the past few months.
(Lichfield) (Con)
May I remind the House, journalists and the Chairman of the
Transport Committee that the area under discussion is beyond
phase 1? It does not end in Birmingham—it goes beyond Birmingham
and then joins the west coast main line at a place called
Handsacre, just by Lichfield. If HS2 is abandoned at that point,
high-speed trains can still run down from Manchester and join the
high-speed line at Handsacre. Does that not make good economic
sense? Will the Minister please pass that on to the Treasury?
Mr Holden
My hon. Friend is quite right; that is exactly what would happen
in that scenario. I will pass on the point he makes to the
Treasury.
(Hammersmith) (Lab)
HS2 has just applied for planning permission for works to enable
Old Oak Common station to serve as a temporary terminus.
“Temporary” previously meant the 2040s, but now it means forever.
The works proposed block the eastern access to the station—just
one example of a total lack of coordination. Will the Minister
commission a report on the implications for HS2 of Old Oak
Common’s being the London terminus?
Mr Holden
Old Oak Common itself will deliver regeneration of 1,600 acres of
London, delivering more than 40,000 homes and supporting 65,000
jobs in outer London. The Government will continue to update the
House if anything else changes with HS2.
(Cheadle) (Con)
In order to unlock economic growth and power up northern
productivity, our region must have improved connectivity, both to
our capital and through a Northern Powerhouse Rail connecting our
cities across the North. Our country will only be truly levelled
up with our connected northern region reaching its full
potential. Uncertainty around phase 2 is unhelpful. I urge my
hon. Friend to consider the importance of northern infrastructure
commitments to businesses across the region.
Mr Holden
As a northerner myself, I certainly take note of my hon. Friend’s
comments and I am sure they will have been heard across
Government as we reflect on the future.
(Stretford and Urmston)
(Lab)
Can the Minister tell my constituents when they will be able to
board a high-speed train from Manchester to London?
Mr Holden
As I have outlined, the Government will update the House, as we
have done consistently, on HS2. The hon. Gentleman should reflect
on what is already being delivered, with 350 construction sites
already across the country and thousands of jobs. There is a huge
amount of transport investment going on, and it is not all about
rail. Greater Manchester has received more than £1 billion of
city region sustainable transport settlement, which includes
potential rail investment.
(Stafford) (Con)
HS2 is behaving outrageously by not paying my Stafford
constituents on time. It is unacceptable that affected residents
are paying outstanding bills on behalf of HS2—for their agents’
fees, for example—in order to have representation. Will the
Secretary of State for Transport please write to me to clarify
that HS2 will treat all my residents fairly, and that we expect
compensation claims to be paid in a timely manner?
Mr Holden
I thank my hon. Friend for her comments. I will certainly pass on
her request to the rail Minister and the Secretary of State, and
I will raise it personally with HS2 Ltd.
(Dwyfor Meirionnydd)
(PC)
The Government’s excuse for denying Wales our fair share of HS2
funding is that the phase 2 connection at Crewe would cut journey
times between north Wales and London. We can now only conclude
that the Government are planning to scrap the phase 2 connection
altogether. Welsh taxpayers are funding this fiasco and getting
nothing back. Will the Minister admit that HS2 is an England-only
railway project and that his Government owe Wales money?
Mr Holden
I do not think the right hon. Lady is reflecting on what the
Plaid-Labour Government are currently doing in Wales: costing
taxpayers billions with their ridiculous across-the-board 20 mph
scheme, and not delivering for the people of Wales. They are even
banning any form of new road programme across all Wales.
Sir (Kenilworth and Southam)
(Con)
It is sometimes right to ask our constituents to take local pain
for national gain, but does my hon. Friend agree that the
national gain of HS2 has always been argued to result from its
being a network of high-speed rail lines, not a single line? If
it is a single line, are we not in danger of the national gain
being extraordinarily limited, and the local pain, including to
my constituents, being extraordinarily extensive and long
lasting?
Mr Holden
A huge amount of work is already going on with HS2 at the moment,
creating tens of thousands of jobs and supporting more than 1,700
apprenticeships. There is a huge amount of benefit, right across
the country, to the investment going into HS2. I will pass on my
right hon. and learned Friend’s broader comments to Ministers in
both my Department and the Treasury.
(Islington North) (Ind)
Is this not an example of a very bad national planning process?
HS2 does not link up with HS1; all the pain and disruption around
Euston will have been for naught; and if it is completed as far
as Birmingham, all it will do is join an already overcrowded rail
network. Surely we have either a high-speed network or nothing at
all. The Minister seems unable to answer any questions at
all.
Mr Holden
I say to the right hon. Member that a huge amount of investment
is already going into HS1, which will deliver transformation,
particularly at Old Oak Common, as I have mentioned, where there
will be a huge boost to economic growth in quite a deprived area
of London as well as that massive investment. I do not know
whether he has been down to Curzon Street and seen the
transformation happening in central Birmingham. I would have
thought that jobs, housing and general prosperity were outcomes
that he would welcome.
(Sedgefield) (Con)
Let me start by correcting the hon. Member for Sheffield, Heeley
(), who said that the Prime
Minister only flies over the north. He does not; he is a regular
user of the Hitachi Azuma on the east coast main line.
For rail and for HS2, it is all about capacity: we need to get
capacity into the rail industry. Certainly, in my Sedgefield
constituency there was no investment in rail by my predecessors.
Whether it is HS2 or regional rail—as with the Leamside line and
Ferryhill station—delivery and certainty are necessary for
supply-chain businesses. This constant change is not helpful.
Will the Minister go back to his Department and encourage
certainty and clarity, whether about HS2 or Northern Powerhouse
Rail? We need certainty for everybody.
Mr Holden
I thank my hon. Friend and constituency neighbour for his
question. He is absolutely right: the Prime Minister uses those
trains regularly—in fact, I think they are made in my hon.
Friend’s constituency, or very nearby—to travel right across the
country. I welcome my hon. Friend’s continued fighting for his
constituents on rail and transport projects not just in his area
but across the wider north and north-east of England. I shall
take his comments back to colleagues.
(Bury South) (Lab)
We have seen the Government give up on the eastern leg; we have
seen them give up on connecting to central London; and we have
seen the downgrading of Northern Powerhouse Rail. We are now
seeing the Government give up on connecting to the north-west and
Britain’s second city of Manchester. Why are the Government
giving up on the north?
Mr Holden
As I have said in answer to other hon. Members, this Government
have put unprecedented investment into our transport
infrastructure right across the country. I have no idea at all
what Labour’s policy in this area is: it seems to flip-flop from
one thing to another daily, making hundreds of billions of
pounds’ worth of unfunded spending commitments. We are a
responsible Government who are going to make the right decisions
in the long-term interests of the country, just as we have in
supporting Greater Manchester and the Mayor’s new upgraded bus
network, which we have been delighted to invest in over the past
few months.
(Poole) (Con)
Having chaired the Select Committee on the first phase for 20
months, I always privately had the view that Old Oak Common was a
more sensible place to stop, because the Elizabeth line runs
straight through Old Oak Common and can deposit people from
Heathrow into the city. As for anything to do with Euston, it is
a very small site and horrendously expensive. However, the logic
of the railway is that it does have to go to Manchester and
beyond, otherwise it was not worth starting.
Mr Holden
I thank my hon. Friend for his comments. I am sure that the
Treasury, No. 10 and the Department will be listening to those
wise words from somebody who served on the Select Committee.
(Huddersfield)
(Lab/Co-op)
Huddersfield is a proud railway town. Is the Minister telling my
constituents and the rest of the country that this is an abysmal
failure of the country—the country of Brunel and Stephenson, the
pioneers of railway building? Is he telling us that the £100
billion was for nothing? Is that what he is saying today?
Mr Holden
No, I am not saying that.
(Thurrock) (Con)
As my hon. Friend knows, I am proud to host the UK’s
fastest-growing ports in my constituency, and one of the things
that those ports are investing in is more freight connections to
transport more containers by rail, rather than road. Achieving
the full potential of those connections absolutely requires HS2
to free up capacity elsewhere on the rail network, so will the
Minister assure me that all the implications of any changes to
the timetable for HS2 will be considered? It impacts on net zero,
the demand on our road infrastructure, and where things will
arrive.
Mr Holden
I thank my hon. Friend for making that important point—I was
delighted to visit some of those freight services in her
constituency with her just last week. Getting freight on to rail
is obviously an important objective of the Government, as is
supporting those on the road network, and I will ensure that that
is taken into consideration in any future decisions that the
Government take.
(Birmingham, Selly Oak)
(Lab)
What estimate has been made of the cost in contract litigation
alone if the Chancellor were to conceive of scrapping phase 2 of
HS2?
Mr Holden
What I would say is that the Government are putting a huge amount
of money into stage 1 of the scheme. Thousands of jobs have
already been created, as well as hundreds of apprenticeships, and
it is going to deliver transformation to central Birmingham and
to a deprived community in outer London. That is investment very
well made in those areas.
(Rayleigh and Wickford)
(Con)
For the record, the roads Minister is a very good one, who has
had to swap lanes today at short notice. How many of the HS2
stations will have ticket offices? Last Thursday in Westminster
Hall, there was a train crash of a debate in which not a single
Back Bencher from any political party backed the Government’s
proposals. As many people have asked the Minister to pass on
messages today, could I add one more, in all good faith? “You are
under enough pressure on HS2 as it is. Do yourselves a favour and
drop the bonkers proposals to get rid of our ticket offices.”
Mr Holden
I thank my right hon. Friend for his comments—he has always been
a champion of our road network, and now he is a champion of our
rail network as well. I will certainly take his thoughts back to
the Department.
(Gower) (Lab)
I used to live in Wigan in the north-west of England, and I am
very disappointed for my family and friends who are still there
that this project is not going ahead—disappointed, like the
people in Swansea are disappointed that the electrification never
got to Swansea. HS2 is an England-only project, so will the
Minister stop talking down the Welsh Labour Government and give
us what we are due?
Mr Holden
I do not need to talk down the Welsh Labour Government; they do
it themselves. They talk down Wales constantly. They have
introduced 20 mph speed limits costing tens of millions of pounds
a year to the local economy. They are doing no road building—no
M4, no Llanymynech bypass, nothing invested in the road network.
The Welsh Labour Government have been in office for 25 years.
They are not even delivering a “get around for £2” bus fare like
we are doing in England.
(Aylesbury) (Con)
HS2 is already being built in Buckinghamshire, unfortunately, and
it is no exaggeration to say that it is a blight on the lives of
my constituents in Aylesbury. Just last Saturday, residents in
Walton Court told me that HS2’s contractors are now working well
outside their contracted hours. Normally, we would think that was
a good thing, but it is causing massive disruption, especially
from noise. Will the Minister make it abundantly clear to HS2 Ltd
and its contractors that they must comply with the agreements
they have made and minimise the harm and distress they are
causing?
Mr Holden
My hon. Friend is a real champion for his constituents. I will
certainly take the message back to HS2 Ltd and, if necessary,
arrange a further meeting between him and the rail Minister to
discuss the matter.
(Carmarthen East and
Dinefwr) (Ind)
For over a decade, I have been highlighting in this House how the
Welsh taxpayer is being fleeced as a result of HS2. The spurious
response I receive from Ministers is that north Wales will be
linked via Crewe. Considering that it is highly unlikely that the
line will make it north of Birmingham, is it not time for the
British Government to ensure that Wales receives its fair funding
for phase 1 of HS2?
Mr Holden
I just point out to the hon. Member that I think Welsh taxpayers
will feel fleeced by the Welsh Labour Government, with the
longest waiting lists in the country, no new road schemes and
falling school standards right across the board. When it comes to
it, the UK Government deliver better value for the Welsh taxpayer
than the Plaid/Labour Welsh Government.
(Ipswich) (Con)
Of course it is right that we discuss investment in our rail
network in the north and the midlands, but we also have to have a
discussion about East Anglia. Time and again, Ely North junction
and Haughley junction have been deprioritised. Both those
projects would cost a fraction of the cost of HS2 but deliver
transformative benefits to the east of England. Will the Minister
have discussions with his colleagues and the Treasury to see how
we can get those two key projects back at the top of the
agenda?
Mr Holden
I certainly will. I was delighted to be in East Anglia just last
week at the opening of the new A11 road, where there has been £65
million of investment, and I have been delighted to visit my hon.
Friend’s constituency on multiple occasions, including to see the
investment that is going into his local bus network. I will
certainly pass on his representations on behalf of his
constituents regarding Ely junction.
(Rother Valley)
(Con)
We had great news a while ago when the Government said they would
scrap the 2b arm of HS2, which would have devastated hundreds of
homes across Rother Valley in Bramley, Wales and Aston, but many
of those homes are still under safeguarding measures, meaning
their owners are stuck in limbo. I know that the Government still
want high-speed trains through the area, but the only financially
viable way of HS2 getting to Leeds is by using existing track.
Why is it taking so long to release the land when everyone knows
and accepts that we will not be building a new track through
Rother Valley to Leeds? Will the Minister release the
safeguarding and release people’s homes?
Mr Holden
I know that my hon. Friend has raised this issue multiple times
with the rail Minister. I will certainly take it back to the
Department and discuss what can be done.
(Vale of Glamorgan) (Con)
My hon. Friend has received a number of challenging questions
from Opposition Members about Barnett consequentials for HS2. Is
he aware that the Leader of the Opposition does not support
Barnett consequentials for HS2?
Mr Holden
I thank my right hon. Friend for his question. It is sometimes
difficult to know what the Leader of the Opposition supports or
does not support. We have had a three-way flip-flop in just the
last few days. It is interesting that the hon. Member for
Sheffield, Heeley (), from the Opposition Front
Bench, raised the fact that I am here today rather than the
Secretary of State, given that the shadow Chancellor of the Duchy
of Lancaster seems to have a very different opinion from the hon.
Lady about what is going on with Labour policy.
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