‘Keep Northern Public’ – new campaign from RMT ahead of Government review

Picture of Michael Holden

Share:

‘Keep Northern Public’ – new campaign from RMT ahead of Government review

Share:

Picture of Michael Holden

Share:

keep-northern-public
Credit: RMT

The has announced that they have joined forces with passenger groups and politicians to demand that the Government keeps the franchise under public control.

On March 1st, Northern was taken under control of the Government and is now operated by Northern Trains Limited.

However, a Government review into how railways are run could move it back into the private rail sector within weeks.

RMT has today sent a clear message to the Government that the franchise model is ‘broken’ and must be publicly owned from top to bottom.

Do you agree with the RMT that Northern should stay under public control? Let us know in the comments below.

What did the officials say?

Mick Cash, General Secretary of Britain’s largest rail union RMT, said;

“Private speculators have driven Northern Rail to the brink and its return to public ownership, joining the East Coast Main Line, should not be seen as a short term fix whilst we wait to see what scheme this Government comes up with next. This has to be a permanent move followed up with the investment and planning needed to deliver the rail services that passengers deserve after years of privatised chaos. “

Ellen Lees, Campaigns Officer at We Own It said:

“The calamity of Northern Rail is all the evidence you need to see just how disastrous privatisation has been on our railway. They’ve caused misery for passengers and it’s a huge relief that their services will now be in public hands. It’s vital that Northern stays public now, to avoid causing further disruption to passengers.

“But Northern aren’t the only ones. From South Western to West Midlands Trains, franchises are collapsing up and down the country. It’s time to face reality – we’ll only fix out broken railway by bringing it all into public ownership”.

Ellie Harrison, Bring Back British Rail said:

“We need a world-class, fully-integrated public transport network which everyone can afford to use, in order to address the climate emergency and tackle chronic inequalities across our country. Public ownership and control of all elements of the network (rail, bus and more) is vital for delivering this and ensuring passengers always come before profit. With plans for publicly-controlled bus networks in Manchester and Liverpool, a publicly-owned Northern rail is the final part of the puzzle. We cannot allow Northern to be re-privatised.”

Where Next?

RailAdvent Plus
   Get image downloads, Prints and Streaming Video
News Homepage
   For the Latest Railway News
RailAdvent Online Shop
   Framed Prints, DVD’s / Blu-Ray’s and more
LocoStop Community
   Come and share your railway pictures
Mainline Steam Info
   Upcoming mainline steam tours/loco movements
RMT
   Visit their website

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

  1. As many of the problems with the railways can be laid at the feet of Network Rail and the DfT, public ownership doesn’t appear to guarantee quality.
    The RMT have a good PR machine, that doesn’t mean they are right.

  2. Will Northern introduce more extra trains including for the Northeast of England that needs more extra trains to places such as Saltburn, Redcar, Hartlepool, Whitby, Middlesbrough, Pickering, Bishop Auckland, Nunthorpe, Stockton, Darlington, Battersby and the Newcastle-Carlisle line. As the new franchise has taken over from Arriva North Rail 3 days ago.

  3. Sadly anything involving the RMT means we will return to those good old days when the unions ruined industry and ruled the government, they have brought SWR virtually to it’s knees over the trivial argument of who opens the doors, you have been warned Northern, good luck.

  4. Northern should stay under public control permanently an s it should be ready interdrated with Network Rail as separate units don’t perform efficiently.

Related Articles