Manchester (Parliament Politics Magazine) – Mayor Andy Burnham tells the Treasury it is required to invest more in transport plans if it wants growth in all regions.
Andy Burnham has expressed stopping HS2 at Birmingham will leave the railway as a âmonument to the British mentalityâ in a severe attack on Treasury spending conclusions. The Manchester mayor conveyed to the Labour conference in Liverpool that the truncated line would be a constant reminder of regional inequality and that some parts of the country are âmore equal than othersâ.
Labour has rejected reinstating the second stage of the high-speed line which was to run between Birmingham and Manchester before it was discarded by Rishi Sunak in 2023. But Burnham expresses the Treasury will now have to âundergo quite a big changeâ if it desires to fulfil Chancellor Rachel Reevesâ promise, made in her address to the conference yesterday, to ensure development in all regions of the country.
What changes does Burnham want from the treasury?
âI listened carefully to the chancellorâs address and I heard a lot in it that I wanted to hear,â he expressed at a panel discussion hosted by Transport for the North. âThe message from us is that we all want change but you donât get it without good transport,â he stated, adding that the Treasury would have to âthink differently than it has in the pastâ about investment in transport infrastructure.
Why is the Green Book criticized by local leaders?
Burnham also condemned the departmentâs so-called Green Book, which restricts spending on major capital projects to areas which are more likely to see a greater return on investment. Reforming the laws, which have long been accused of entrenching regional inequality and focusing investment in more wealthy parts of the country, was a key part of the âlevelling upâ agenda supported by Boris Johnson during the 2019 general election.
What are the implications of funding cuts on transport?
The mayor expressed the Treasury âsees its main assignment as controlling or cutting public spending, and that presents part of why weâre in the position that weâre inâ. He said: âWhy are we just expected to put up with this? We as citizens of this country should absolutely be demanding equivalent living standards, equal quality transport.
How will hs2âs future impact the north of England?
âHS2, in the end, is going to turn out to be the type of memorial to the British psyche that some places are more similar than others. Youâll get on in a gleaming new station to Birmingham on a brand new train, and then youâll go off onto the West Coast mainline on the current project.
What does that say to anybody seeing this country about what our own country feels about the north of England? That we can somehow be predicted to accept not even second best but third best.â
Andy Burnham is nowadays lobbying for ÂŁ17bn in government grant to build a new rail line between Manchester and Birmingham operating money which he claims has been left over from the revocation of HS2âs northern leg.