The Conservatives are today (Saturday 8th June) announcing that if
elected, they will stop pay-per-mile road taxes, rule out blanket
Low Traffic Neighbourhoods and 20mph zones and reverse Labour's
unfair ULEZ expansion in London. Through a ‘Backing Drivers
Bill' in the first session, the Conservatives will build on last
autumn's Plan for Drivers with a package of bold measures which
will protect drivers from the draconian policies of local Labour
politicians....Request free trial
The Conservatives are today (Saturday 8th June)
announcing that if elected, they will stop pay-per-mile road
taxes, rule out blanket Low Traffic Neighbourhoods and 20mph
zones and reverse Labour's unfair ULEZ expansion in London.
Through a ‘Backing Drivers Bill' in the first session, the
Conservatives will build on last autumn's Plan for Drivers with a
package of bold measures which will protect drivers from the
draconian policies of local Labour politicians. Unnecessary
restrictions have made travel harder for people and curbed
individual freedoms. These measures will reverse this
trend.
Sadiq Khan's unpopular ULEZ expansion charges thousands of people
living around London who had no say in his election and can now
no longer afford to get to hospital appointments or where they
work or study. So the Conservatives will take bold action to
protect drivers and reverse it.
Pay-per-mile road taxes are one of the most worrying proposals
currently being explored by local Labour politicians. They could
see drivers charged depending on how far they drive, what time of
day and what car they drive it in. Labour looked at a national
scheme last time they were in Government. This Bill will make
sure they can never be introduced.
While 20mph zones can help improve road safety in residential
areas or outside schools, misuse undermines public trust and
risks congestion and pollution, so we are clear they must only be
considered on a road-by-road basis, and with the support of
people who live there.
So the Conservatives will rule out blanket Low Traffic
Neighbourhoods and 20mph zones which have been so damaging to
businesses. Under these plans, local people will be newly
empowered with any new schemes subject to a local referendum and
a right to challenge existing schemes. These measures will also
apply in Wales where the Welsh Labour Government has ignored the
views of the public and imposed blanket 20mph speed
limits.
This builds on the Conservatives' strong track record of backing
drivers. Measures like freezing fuel duty for 14 years in a row,
saving the average household £1,000, publishing the milestone
Plan for Drivers and putting hundreds of millions into the Safer
Roads Fund. As well as building over 1,100 of new and upgraded
major roads, after years of neglect under the last Labour
Government.
We are also committed to invest £8.3 billion of HS2 savings to
repair roads and fix potholes. Funding at risk under Labour who
would take us back to square one.
In towns and villages across the UK, the car is an essential mode
of transport. In recent years it has been increasingly difficult
to get around by car due to the actions of local Labour
politicians. This clear plan for drivers will reverse this trend
for a secure future for drivers.
, Prime Minister, said:
“We are the party on the side of drivers. That's why we have a
clear plan to keep motoring costs under control and ensure people
have the freedom to drive as they need to lead their daily
lives.
“We will empower drivers and local residents to challenge
aggressive and punitive traffic-inducing measures, like low
traffic neighbourhoods that were imposed without local
consent.
“That's the clear choice in this election – between Labour who
have launched a war on drivers in London and Wales, and our clear
plan to give drivers the freedom they need to build a secure
future for themselves and their children.”
, Transport Secretary, said:
“ We will continue to build on our clear plan for drivers and
make sure they are supported in the face of Labour politicians
desperate to tax them off the roads.
“We will reverse Sadiq Khan's unfair ULEZ expansion and rule out
any blanket 20 mile an hour zones because we are on drivers'
side. And we will rule out any pay-per-mile road tax to keep
costs for drivers down.
“There's a clear choice at this election – Labour who will
continue to penalise drivers or the Conservatives who
will back drivers.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors
[i] DfT, News Story, 17 November 2023.
Our Plan for Drivers
In our first King's Speech, we will introduce a ‘Backing
Drivers Bill' that will:
-
Stop pay-per-mile road taxes. Under a
pay-per-mile road tax scheme you could be charged for how far
you drive, what car you drive and at what time of day. The
Mayor of London has instructed Transport for London to look at
such proposals (Project Detroit). The last Labour Government
looked at pay-per-mile road taxing but backed down after 1.8
million people signed a petition opposing it. We believe it is
not fair for drivers to penalised for each journey they take,
or for the Government to dictate how far you drive. This is
particularly the case for rural communities who are often more
reliant on their cars. A Conservative Government will not
introduce pay-per-mile road taxes and will ban Mayors
and local councils from doing so.
-
Reverse Labour's unfair ULEZ expansion. Sadiq
Khan's ULEZ tax rise only has a "moderate" or "minor" effect on
pollution - but taxes poorer drivers off the road. Because it
hits thousands of people living around London who can no longer
afford to get to work, to study or to hospital appointments,
but had no say in his election, we will reverse it.
-
Rule out, top-down, blanket Low Traffic Neighbourhoods
(LTN) and 20mph zones by stipulating that any new schemes must
be subject to a referendum. Independent research into
LTNs showed only 13% of residents responded to council planning
consultations, and just 18% felt their views had influenced
local decisions. Meanwhile LTNs were issuing an average of
36,000 penalty notices a year, with the highest issuing 170,000
penalties. While 20mph zones can help improve road safety in
residential areas or outside schools, misuse undermines public
trust and risks congestion and pollution, so we are clear they
must only be considered on a road-by-road basis, and with the
support of people who live there. We will require any new
schemes to be put to a local referendum in the wards affected
with the result binding on councils.
-
Introduce a ‘right to challenge' for existing LTN and
20mph schemes. Where local residents can trigger a
local referendum in affected wards if there is sufficient local
concern. Residents will trigger a local referendum by signing a
petition. If 15% of those living in affected wards sign it,
then a referendum of those living in affected wards would be
held with the result binding on councils.
We will make sure these measures extend to
Wales:
-
We will apply these measures to Wales, where Labour's
blanket 20mph policy has cost millions and incited a
record-breaking petition in opposition to it. The
Welsh Government introduced a default 20mph speed limit at a
cost of £32 million in September 2023, despite strong
opposition. It is estimated to have a £4.5 billion negative
impact on the Welsh economy. Since came into office, the
Welsh Government have reluctantly agreed to a listening
exercise but this does not go far enough – we will extend our
‘Backing Drivers Bill' to Wales to devolve
decision-making still further, by giving local communities a
legal right to challenge 20mph schemes in their areas and
require local referendums for any new ones to be introduced in
future. The mechanism for doing so will be as set out above for
schemes in London.
Costings
LTNs: There should be no proactive cost if this is not
retrospective, given LAs should not be factoring in the income
from fines or punitive schemes. There would be small costs
for conducting local referendums, with these minimal costs borne
by local taxpayers. In practice most councils would be dissuaded
from embarking on unpopular schemes, which could even generate a
small saving overall.
Pay-per-mile road taxes: no direct cost as no pay-per-mile road
tax revenue is assumed in future forecasts, and fuel duty
receipts are forecast to continue increasing over the coming
years.
ULEZ: Reversing ULEZ expansion would, according to TFL's own
figures revealed through an FOI, cost £80m if introduced from
April 2025, a realistic assumption given the need for primary
legislation. TfL expect the expansion to raise nothing from
2026/7, leaving no long-term costs. (TfL figures sourced from
FOI request) The Mayor could of course reverse the expansion
at any time, removing the need for this legislation. We would
expect the Mayor to deal with the lost revenue, noting this is
far less than he was wasted on vanity projects, and that
Government has provided £6.6bn of support for TfL since
2020.
Government record since 2010
-
Publishing The Plan for Drivers, outlining steps to
help drivers and stating it is not right that drivers feel
under attack by certain campaigns. Our Plan for
Drivers makes clear the Conservatives' are on the side of
drivers and sought to offer long-term solutions to issues
drivers face such as over-zealous use of traffic enforcement
measures (DfT, Policy Paper, 2 October 2023, link).
-
Investing £8.3 billion of redirected HS2 funding to
deliver long-term funding settlements to local authorities to
improve road quality, saving the average driver £440 in car
repairs. Because of the long-term decision we took to
redirect HS2 funding into more projects in more places, local
authorities will receive a share of £8.3 billion over the next
eleven years for road repairs on top of existing settlements.
This funding is enough to resurface over 5,000 miles of road
(DfT, News Story, 17 November 2023, link).
-
Boosting the Safer Roads Fund by £50 million, having
already invested £100 million to fix 50 of the country's most
dangerous roads. We have boosted the Safer Roads Fund
by £50 million to fix 27 of the country's most dangerous roads.
The fund has already invested £100 million to fix 50 roads but
we are now going further to protect road users (DfT, News
Story, 6 April 2023, link).
-
Giving drivers more time to switch to electric
vehicles, recognising the progress we have made to cut
emissions and as we stick to the plan to deliver net
zero. Because we have made great progress in cutting
emissions, we are able to give drivers more time to switch to
electric vehicles whilst sticking to our plan to cut emissions.
Drivers will now be able to buy new petrol and diesel cars
until 2035 (PMO, Authored article, 20 September 2023,
link).
-
Delivering the first nationwide injunction against
climate activists who block our key roads, standing on the side
of working people as we grow the economy. We are
making use of every avenue of law to prevent the
life-endangering action being carried out by protestors, which
is causing disruption to workers' lives and livelihoods (DfT,
News Story, 26 October 2021, link)
-
Freezing fuel duty for the fourteenth consecutive year,
saving families over £1,000 since 2010. Since 2010, we
have frozen fuel duty for fourteen consecutive years and
maintained the five pence cut for an extra year. The support is
available for much longer than has been the case in many
countries and represents around £13 billion over three years
and £250 for the average car driver. (HM Treasury, Spring
Budget Speech 2024, 6 March 2024, link)
While other parties would take us back to square
one...
-
The Welsh Labour Government are spending over £30
million to roll out blanket 20mph speed limits which will cost
the Welsh economy billions, a decision that will take us back
to square one. 20mph speed limits have cost over £30
million to rollout and the Welsh Government's own analysis of
their plans shows that the project could cost the Welsh economy
up to £4.5 billion. Following widespread opposition, they have
reluctantly agreed to a listening exercise but this does not go
far enough (Welsh Government, FAQ, 17 May 2024,
link;
Explanatory Memorandum, 21 June 2022, p32, link; Senedd
Research, 24 April 2024, link).
-
Welsh Labour are refusing to build any new
roads. Welsh Labour have said that all new
road-building projects in Wales are being frozen while they
conduct a review, including plans for the Deeside ‘Red Route',
the Llandeilo bypass, and a third Anglesey crossing (Welsh
Government, Press Release, 22 June 2021, link).
-
Welsh Labour are also scheming to introduce road
charging. The Environment Act expanded Welsh Labour's
powers to introduce road charging schemes on trunk roads, and
their Infrastructure Bill includes more powers around road
tolls (Environment (Wales) Act: Section 22, link; BBC
News, 21 November 2023, link; Infrastructure
(Wales) Bill: Section 77, link; Aberdare
Online, 19 March 2024, link; Senedd
Record, 3 October 2023, link).
-
Sadiq Khan's ULEZ expansion charged drivers £26 million
in the first month, as more than 57,000 vehicles were penalised
for being used. Transport for London raised £26
million in the first month of the Sadiq Khan's ULEZ expansion,
with more than 57,000 vehicles charges each day for use
(The Evening Standard, 1 November 2023, link).
-
referred to funding roads
and transport as a ‘political choice'. He said the
Government had made a ‘political choice' to spend transport
budgets on roads, not seeming to recognise that low and zero
carbon emission vehicles still need to drive on something
(The Guardian, 1 April 2020, link).
-
Labour voted against our proposals to stop protestors
gluing themselves to roads. Labour and the Liberal
Democrats defeated a clause in the Police, Crime, Sentencing
and Courts Bill which would have made it an offence to obstruct
a highway (Hansard, 17 January 2022, link).
-
The Liberal Democrats want to increase road tax –
slamming struggling drivers with massive bills. The
Liberal Democrats are calling for ‘graduating Vehicle Excise
Duty by fuel efficiency and increasing rates for fossil fuel
vehicles overall'. Electric cars are already exempt, so this
would mean an overall increase in road tax that especially hits
the least well off who cannot afford to upgrade their cars to
the latest model (Liberal Democrats, F12 Tackling the
Climate Emergency: Proposals for Carbon Pricing, accessed
18 September 2021, link; ONS, Price
Inflation, 18 May 2022, link).
-
Labour looked at pay-per-mile road taxes when they were
last in Government, In 2005, the then Labour
Government proposed pay-per-mile road taxes at a price of up to
£1.34 pay-per-mile at peak. The proposal was dropped in
2007, following a 1.8m signature
petition. Whilst London Mayor has recently denied plans to
introduce per-mile congestion charging, he has previously
advocated pay-per-mile charging.
-
Liberal Democrats have long advocated various forms of
pay-per-mile road taxes, most recently at their
conference in 2023.
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