Ahead of Transport Secretary, Grant Shapps’ Conservative Party
Conference appearance, Labour has looked at 12 of his biggest
failures during the last year.
From the current petrol crisis to chaos at airports, the
Transport Secretary has let down passengers, travellers and the
wider transport industry.
, Labour
Party Chair, said:
“Conservative transport policy under Grant Shapps’ leadership has
been a shambles. His huge delays in taking action are currently
being painfully exposed.
“The public deserve better than a Tory Government who are out for
themselves and can’t be trusted to stand up for the interests of
working people.”
Ends
Notes to editors:
Failure 1 – HGV driver shortage
- With a long term driver shortage of more than 100,000, Grant
Shapps’ solution is a temporary visa for just 5,000 people for
just three months.
- Shapps – along with the Prime Minister - has presented no
clear plan, held no joint taskforce meetings with industry,
ministers and unions as Labour has suggested, and failed to grasp
the severity of the situation.
Failure 2 – Petrol crisis
- Caused in part by the HGV shortage and in part by Shapps’
mismanagement and poor communication, over the past week we have
seen long queues at the pumps, with petrol prices hitting an
eight-year high.
- Ministers including continued to claim there was no crisis, despite
people across the country being able to fill up to get to work,
get their children to school or carry out essential day-to-day
tasks
Failure 3 – Cost of PCR tests
- While the Government says it is trying encourage
international travel, people are still having to pay for their
own required PCR tests, often at a cost of well over £100 per
person.
Failure 4 – Delays at the border
- Shapps failed to get a grip of the situation at UK airports
as people attempted to travel again, waiting hours in queues to
get into the country.
- He failed to work with Home Office colleagues to ensure there
were sufficient Border Force staff in place to deal with the
extra work required due to pandemic restrictions.
Failure 5 – Failure to publish the international traffic
light system data
- Under both the traffic light system and the new simplified
version, the Government has repeatedly refused to publish the
country-by-country assessment data, which would give confidence
to both consumers and the industry that the decision to allow
travel is based on sound science and not politics.
Failure 5 – Rise in rail fares
- Regulated rail fares are likely to rise by 4.8% next year.
- Average fares will rise to 50.35% more than they were in 2010
- the average commuter faces paying £3,295 for their season
ticket
Failure 6 – Failure to commit to HS2 to Leeds
- The Tories committed to HS2 at the 2010, 2015 & 2017
elections. In their 2019 manifesto, they waited for the outcome
of the review into it they had commissioned. It reported three
months after the election. On the day of its publication the
Prime Minister said in reference to HS2: “We are going to get
this done”.
- Press reports indicate the Tories are set to pull plans to
build HS2 all the way to Leeds.
Failure 7 – Seven-year delay on Northern Powerhouse
Rail
- Tory ministers have re-announced or re-committed to Northern
Powerhouse Rail more than 60 times in the last seven years, yet
not a single mile of track has been built.
Failure 8 – Massive rise in bus fares
- ONS inflation data shows bus and coach fare prices were up
21% in January 2021 compared to the same month a year before.
That’s the highest yearly rise since the figures began in 1988.
Failure 9 – more people than ever put off
cycling
- Official figures show that 66% of respondents to the
Government’s official British social attitudes survey ‘agreed or
strongly agreed that it is too dangerous for me to cycle on the
road’.
- This is up from 61% in 2011. Of those that cycle, there’s
been a 30% increase in number feeling it’s too dangerous over the
decade, from 44% in 2011 to 57% in 2020.
Failure 10 – failure to support jobs in the aviation
industry
- When Eurostar, the aviation and tourism sector needed
financial support from the Government, a sectoral deal never came
– despite being promised by more than 18 months ago.
- There was an absence of any mention in the Transport
Secretary’s statement on the 20th September of the
81,000 workers in the industry that were still on furlough at the
time, as they faced a cliff edge just 10 days later.
Failure 11 – missing 4,000 zero emission buses
- Ministers promised 18 months ago they would deliver 4,000 new
zero emission buses – yet not a single one has made it onto the
road.
Failure 12 – pulling a deal to end the DVLA
dispute
- Ministers at the highest level were accused of scuppering a
deal which would have ended the ongoing dispute with DVLA staff
and the PCS union over health and safety and avert further strike
action at the Swansea sites.
- The dispute is ongoing, the previous deal has still not been
returned to the table and ministers have still not confirmed why
they pulled the deal.