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Crewe and Nantwich MP calls for West Coast Main Line improvements
Crewe and Nantwich MP calls for West Coast Main Line improvements

BBC News

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Crewe and Nantwich MP calls for West Coast Main Line improvements

An MP has called on the government to make improvements to the West Coast Main Line to "show people across the North West that this government care about their future".Connor Naismith, the Labour MP for Crewe and Nantwich, spoke about issues on the line during a Westminster Hall debate and called for remodelling of Crewe also called for the government to "look carefully" at alternative proposals to HS2 put forward by the mayors of Greater Manchester and the West minister Lillian Greenwood said the government was "continuing to review options for enhancing rail connectivity in the Midlands and North". She added that more detail would be provided in the coming months. Naismith told a debate that the West Coast Main Line faced "critical problems" and said the issues were experienced by many attending the debate and their from across the political spectrum also spoke about issues they and their constituents had using the line including Labour's Jo Platt, Conservative Aphra Brandreth and Liberal Democrat Tim also spoke about capacity and said improvements would mean less congestion on the area's motorways."I again press the government to look carefully at the proposals developed by the Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, the Mayor of the West Midlands, Richard Parker, and Arup and other stakeholders, namely the Midlands-North West rail link," he also called for upgrades to Crewe Station, saying it had seen "little investment since the 1980s"."Failure to do anything is simply not an option, so I politely ask the minister, what will the government do to flesh out the options that they are considering?" he said."Let us improve the main line, let us rebuild Crewe station, and let us show people across the North West that this government care about their future." In response, Greenwood said the government knew there were "real and very understandable concerns" about capacity between Manchester and Birmingham following the cancellation of phase two of HS2."I also understand the frustration - and, frankly, the anger - that this decision created for leaders and communities across the Midlands and the North," she said she set out to the House of Commons in January that the government would not reverse that cancellation."I also noted that we were, and are, continuing to review options for enhancing rail connectivity in the Midlands and the North. That work continues and is now supported by the clarity that the spending review has provided," she said she was unable to provide more detail at this stage but said the government "hope to say more in the coming months, including on the future of Northern Powerhouse Rail", which is a planned link between Manchester and Liverpool. Read more Cheshire stories from the BBC and follow BBC Stoke & Staffordshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Labour's big betrayal: This war on the poor will backfire badly – not least among its own MPs
Labour's big betrayal: This war on the poor will backfire badly – not least among its own MPs

The Independent

time27-03-2025

  • Business
  • The Independent

Labour's big betrayal: This war on the poor will backfire badly – not least among its own MPs

The proportion of children in poverty rose in the last full year of the Conservative government, according to the latest figures published this morning. For many Labour MPs, one of the core tests of their government will be getting that figure – 31 per cent, representing 4.5m children – down. Instead, they read the dry words of their government's own impact assessment yesterday: 'Using this model, we estimate there will be an additional 250,000 people (including 50,000 children) in relative poverty after housing costs in 2029/30 as a result of modelled changes to social security, compared to the baseline projections.' No wonder Clive Lewis, the Labour MP for Norwich South, hesitated for longer than was comfortable when asked if his government, not yet nine months old, had been a disappointment. More worryingly for the Labour leadership, new MPs elected last year are starting to go public with their opposition. Connor Naismith, the MP for Crewe and Nantwich, said yesterday, 'I did not come into politics to inflict this on the most vulnerable people in our society, and I cannot vote for changes which will have this impact.' Many more Labour MPs have expressed their dismay privately, with estimates ranging from 30 to 80 for the number who are prepared to vote against the government. The phrase 'balancing the books on the back of the poorest' has resonated. It was applied first to the cut in foreign aid, but now it is applied to those in poverty in the UK. Versions of it made front-page headlines today in The Mirror and The Guardian. Some MPs even suggest that the welfare cuts could be Labour's big betrayal, comparable to the Liberal Democrats' broken promise on tuition fees in 2010. I don't think they will be, for two reasons. One is that the cuts are defensible and will not necessarily have the effect of increasing poverty, despite the impact assessment. The other is that public opinion broadly supports the view that we are spending too much on social security benefits. Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, says of the government's own estimate of an additional 250,000 people in poverty: 'I don't think that is what will happen.' Actually, she is right. The impact assessment itself says, 'There are important limitations to this analysis.' The most important limitation is that it fails to assume that the changes will work. The point of the changes, according to Liz Kendall, the work and pensions secretary, is to encourage and support more people into work, where they will be better off. But the impact assessment's model is static, assuming simply that people will receive less, or that they will not start to receive what they would have done if the system had not been changed, and that behaviour will not be affected. There is going to be a great deal of unhappiness in some quarters of the Parliamentary Labour Party over the next few months – the welfare changes will not be voted on in the Commons for some time. MPs will not like being besieged by charities, trade unions and their own members who see the changes as a direct attack on their values. Reeves, Kendall and Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the Treasury, have done what they can to prepare the ground with Labour MPs. Morgan McSweeney, Keir Starmer's chief of staff, did what he could to try to ensure that as many Blairites as possible were selected as Labour MPs in the first place. Most of them, by a combination of steely pragmatism and desire for promotion, accept the leadership's arguments. Welfare spending overall is not being cut; it will grow a little more slowly over the next five years than was previously forecast. Child poverty will probably not increase as a result of these measures, assuming there is the smallest of incentive effects in encouraging people off benefits and into work. The bottom line is that a government with a working majority of 168 can tolerate a large rebellion without even having to consider the positions of the opposition parties. It will be difficult at a personal level for some MPs, who feel that they didn't come into politics either to take tough decisions on welfare or to defend themselves against people on their own side who are passionately opposed to them. But their opponents have to explain why they think that the welfare budget should rise by £5bn a year more than it is already rising. Labour MPs were warned. Starmer did say that the Budget last year would be 'really painful', and he made it clear that more difficult decisions would have to continue to be made. They must know that one of the things they 'did not come into politics for' was an easy life.

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