logo
Rail minister blasts ‘arrogant' HS2 over crisis-hit flagship project

Rail minister blasts ‘arrogant' HS2 over crisis-hit flagship project

South Wales Argus18 hours ago

In withering criticism, Lord Hendy of Richmond Hill said the flagship HS2 project had gone 'badly wrong', pointing out the Government could not say when it would open or how much it would cost, which was a 'terrible position'.
With new leadership in place, he pointedly remarked there would now be bosses 'who are communicative, collaborative, straight and honest'.
Lord Hendy also noted his own Department for Transport (DfT), which owns HS2 Ltd, bore 'some culpability' and noted the most senior civil servant at the ministry had retired.
His scathing remarks came after Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said an interim report by Mark Wild, the chief executive of HS2 Ltd, who was appointed late last year, 'lays bare the shocking mismanagement of the project under previous governments'.
The Cabinet minister said she was 'drawing a line in the sand, calling time on years of mismanagement, flawed reporting and ineffective oversight'.
HS2 was originally due to run between London and Birmingham, then on to Manchester and Leeds, but the project was cutback by the Conservatives in power because of spiralling costs.
The first phase was initially planned to open by the end of 2026, but this was pushed back to between 2029 and 2033 and will now be delayed even further.
In 2013, HS2 was estimated to cost £37.5 billion (at 2009 prices) for the entire planned network, including the now-scrapped extensions from Birmingham.
In June last year, HS2 Ltd assessed the cost for the line between London and Birmingham would be up to £66 billion.
Ms Alexander said the Government has accepted all the recommendations of a review into the governance and accountability of HS2 Ltd, led by senior infrastructure delivery adviser, James Stewart.
She also confirmed the appointment of Mike Brown as chairman of HS2 Ltd.
Mr Brown is a former commissioner for Transport for London, who helped to oversee the delivery of Crossrail, the transport project which became London's Elizabeth line.
HS2 chief executive Mark Wild, left, and rail minister Lord Hendy (PA/Jonathan Brady)
Speaking in Parliament on the 'reset' of the high-speed rail development, Lord Hendy said: 'HS2 has gone badly wrong, and it falls to this Government to sort it out, because we cannot carry on like this.
'Currently, we can predict neither when it will open nor how much it will cost. That is a pretty terrible position to be in and it has to be said the consequences are as a result of actions taken by previous governments.'
Responding to a question from his Tory counterpart Lord Moylan on criticism of the DfT in Mr Stewart's review, the minister said: 'My own department clearly shoulders some culpability.
'He asked what has happened in the department and, although I do not think it is not right to delve into senior personnel, he will, of course, note that a new permanent secretary is about to be appointed, the previous incumbent having retired.'
Lord Hendy went on: 'One of the really important things in this is that, I think for the first time for a long time, we will have a chair and a chief executive of HS2 who are communicative, collaborative, straight and honest, and we can have a discussion with them about where this is going and what it is doing.
'One of the characteristics of this company so far, and of the Crossrail company for most of its life, is that they were both arrogant enough to believe that they knew what they were doing without any supervision and without telling anybody what was really going on.
'In both cases, it went badly wrong.
'Mark (Wild) knows that he has to change the culture of the company. There clearly are some good people there, but they need to be led and directed properly.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK scrambles to charter flights out of Israel for British citizens
UK scrambles to charter flights out of Israel for British citizens

The National

timean hour ago

  • The National

UK scrambles to charter flights out of Israel for British citizens

Downing Street urged Britons in the region to register their presence with the Foreign Office as the crisis deepens and Keir Starmer called on all sides to reach a diplomatic outcome. Number 10 on Friday morning said that the situation remains 'fast-moving' and would continue to be monitored closely as the Government works with Israeli authorities to ready flights out of Tel Aviv. A spokesman added: 'We are advising British nationals to continue to register their presence in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, to be contactable with further guidance on these flights. 'The Foreign Secretary will shortly announce that the Government is working with the Israeli authorities to provide charter flights from Tel Aviv airport once airspace reopens.' Foreign Secretary David Lammy said work was underway to provide the flights 'based on levels of demand' from UK citizens when airspace reopens. Land routes out of Israel remain open and British staff are on hand to support UK nationals who have crossed the border, he added. (Image: Nathan Howard, REUTERS) Starmer has also urged Donald Trump (above) to step back from military action against Iran after a series of sabre-rattling posts from the US president on his Truth Social platform. The Prime Minister said there is a 'real risk of escalation' in the conflict, adding that there had previously been 'several rounds of discussions with the US' and 'that, to me, is the way to resolve this issue'. Israeli air strikes reached into the city of Rasht on the Caspian Sea early on Friday, Iranian media reported. Since the conflict erupted last week, at least 657 people, including 263 civilians, have been killed in Iran and more than 2,000 wounded, according to a Washington-based Iranian human rights group. READ MORE: UK's 'Union flag plane damaged' in pro-Palestine RAF break-in Meanwhile, at least 24 people in Israel have been killed and hundreds wounded, according to the Israeli authorities. It remains unclear whether the UK would join any military action, although there has been speculation that US involvement could require using the British-controlled base on Diego Garcia in the Chagos Islands. The B-2 stealth bombers based there are capable of carrying specialised 'bunker buster' bombs, which could be used against Iran's underground nuclear facility at Fordo. Attorney General Lord Hermer (below) is reported to have raised legal concerns about any British involvement in the conflict beyond defending its allies, which could limit the extent of any support for the US if Trump decides to back up Israeli attacks on Iran. Lammy arrived in Geneva on Friday for talks with the Iranian foreign minister and European allies as the UK presses for a diplomatic solution to the conflict. The Foreign Secretary is meeting Abbas Araghchi alongside his counterparts from France, Germany and the EU as he seeks to negotiate a settlement before Trump decides on whether to take military action against Tehran. In a statement read by his press secretary on Thursday, Trump said there was still 'a substantial chance of negotiations' and said he would make a decision on deploying US forces 'within the next two weeks'. Trump had previously said he 'may' join Israeli strikes against Iran and its nuclear programme, but added: 'I may not do it. I mean, nobody knows what I'm going to do.' Friday's meeting with the so-called E3 countries follows Lammy's visit to Washington, where he met US secretary of state Marco Rubio in the White House on Thursday evening to discuss 'how a deal could avoid a deepening conflict'.

Foreign Office to evacuate stranded Britons from Israel
Foreign Office to evacuate stranded Britons from Israel

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Foreign Office to evacuate stranded Britons from Israel

Britons stranded in Israel will be evacuated on government charter flights when the country's airspace reopens. The Foreign Office announced on Friday that it is organising aircraft to extract British people who are in Tel Aviv and want to return home. There are thought to be thousands of UK nationals in Israel, although many live there permanently or do not want to leave the country. Israeli airspace has been closed for a week after Iran launched missile attacks in retaliation for air strikes ordered by Benjamin Netanyahu last Thursday. The conflict has left tens of thousands of tourists stranded, with no commercial planes allowed to take off. 'Working with Israeli authorities' David Lammy, the Foreign Secretary, said: 'As part of our efforts to support British nationals in the Middle East, the Government is working with the Israeli authorities to provide charter flights from Tel Aviv airport when airspace reopens, based on levels of demand from British nationals. 'British nationals should register their presence in Israel and the OPTs to be contacted with further guidance on these flights. 'Land routes out of Israel remain open and UK staff are on hand to support British nationals who have crossed the border. This will include providing transport – subject to demand – to nearby airports for onward commercial flights. 'We continue to push for a diplomatic solution to avoid a deepening conflict.' Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) sources had previously suggested that the UK would not charter jets to evacuate British people, but that position was reversed on Friday. The FCDO has asked all British nationals in Israel to register their presence on an online 'portal' so ministers are aware of how many people may be stranded. The UK has also evacuated the families of embassy staff in Tel Aviv, following a series of attacks by Iran on Israeli sites, which have killed civilians. Foreign Office staff have been deployed on the ground in Jordan and Egypt to assist British nationals who have left Israel by road. It is unusual for the Government to charter flights directly to evacuate British citizens from a foreign conflict, especially when commercial services are expected to be running. Likely to trigger rush for flights However, the reopening of the airspace is likely to trigger a rush for flights, and it may be several days before commercial tickets are widely available. The situation has also caused a diplomatic issue for the UK, because Israel is keen not to be viewed as an unsafe place for citizens of allied countries to visit. The FCDO changed its guidance on Sunday to advise British people not to travel to Israel, warning that 'the situation has the potential to deteriorate further, quickly and without warning'. The decision to evacuate UK nationals comes ahead of a meeting to discuss the conflict between EU countries and Britain in Geneva later on Friday. Mr Lammy has flown to the meeting directly from Washington DC, where he met Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state Donald Trump is said to be leaning towards intervening directly in the conflict between Israel and Iran by striking one of Iran's nuclear fuel enrichment plants, buried within a mountain in the north-east of the country. But he has delayed making a decision on American intervention for a fortnight, which the UK says gives a 'window' to resolve the conflict through diplomacy. Only the US has a 'bunker buster' bomb powerful enough to damage the facility, although experts say there is no guarantee that even America's 30,000-pound 'Massive Ordnance Penetrator' will be strong enough. The UK Government has urged 'de-escalation' from all sides and called for 'cool heads'. Mr Lammy is understood to have told Mr Rubio that the US should not intervene, at risk of making the conflict more severe.

Labour's work to devise official definition of 'Islamophobia' should be suspended IMMEDIATELY as it risks worsening grooming gangs scandal, report warns
Labour's work to devise official definition of 'Islamophobia' should be suspended IMMEDIATELY as it risks worsening grooming gangs scandal, report warns

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Labour's work to devise official definition of 'Islamophobia' should be suspended IMMEDIATELY as it risks worsening grooming gangs scandal, report warns

Labour moves to draw up an official definition of Islamophobia would shut down efforts to combat grooming gangs, a new report warns. The Policy Exchange think-tank said the work of the Government's 'Anti-Muslim Hate/Islamophobia Definition Working Group', set up earlier this year, should be immediately suspended. Devising a government-backed definition of Islamophobia – even though it would not initially have any force in law – would 'almost certainly turbocharge cancel culture ', it said. Policy Exchange's warning came days after a long-awaited review by Whitehall troubleshooter Baroness Casey found public bodies covered up sickening evidence about Asian grooming gangs 'for fear of appearing racist '. Councils, police forces and the Home Office repeatedly 'shied away' from dealing with 'uncomfortable' questions about the ethnicity of rapists preying on thousands of vulnerable girls. In the wake of the Casey review, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper promised to 'root out' the grooming gang 'scourge'. But Policy Exchange's report warns: 'At the same time, ministers are pursuing a policy which will have the opposite effect. 'It would have made exposing the grooming scandal even harder and slower than it already was. It will make rooting out the scourge more difficult. It will give perpetrators a new place to hide.' Ministers said in March that the move to devise a definition would 'seek to provide the government and other relevant bodies with an understanding of unacceptable treatment and prejudice against Muslim communities'. It would not carry statutory power, at least initially, but there have been widespread concerns that it would lead to Islam being given protections beyond those afforded to other religions. The work is being led by former Tory attorney general Dominic Grieve KC. Policy Exchange senior fellow and former British ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Sir John Jenkins, said in a letter to Mr Grieve: 'Whatever form of words is chosen, and whatever legal status it has to start with, any definition will have serious consequences. 'It will almost certainly turbocharge 'cancel culture'. 'Even without the force of an official definition, claims of Islamophobia are already used to close down legitimate debate and deter investigation of alleged wrongdoing, as in Rotherham or Batley, with disastrous results all round, including for the wider Muslim community itself.' He added: 'Unless it literally restates the existing legal protections covering all faiths, any official Islamophobia definition will be an undeniable act of two-tier policy, creating special status and protection for members of one faith alone. 'It is unlikely to alleviate Islamist discontent – it will stoke it, creating new opportunities for grievance politics, challenge and attack in every institution and workplace.' Sir John said the working group 'may have begun its work with its conclusions pre-determined', adding that he had 'little confidence' it would approach key issues with an open mind. The report said the government's work should be put on hold until the end of a national inquiry on grooming gangs, which Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer belatedly ordered in the wake of the Casey review. Dr Paul Stott, head of security and extremism at Policy Exchange, said: ''A danger going forward is that the proposed 'Islamophobia' definition could shut down discussion on grooming gangs and if accepted by Government restrict debate on this and on other issues vital to our social cohesion.' He added: 'This week has demonstrated the need to move on from the view that concern about grooming gangs is in some way racist, Islamophobic, or a far-right issue. 'It is clearly not and it never was.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store