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Railways Bill (Seventh sitting) 2026-01-29

29 January 2026

Lead MP

Olly Glover

Debate Type

General Debate

Tags

TaxationTransport
Other Contributors: 27

At a Glance

Olly Glover raised concerns about railways bill (seventh sitting) 2026-01-29 in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Lead Contributor

Opened the debate
Proposes amendment to ensure rail strategy covers a period of 30 years, arguing that a long-term vision is necessary for sustainable railway development. Emphasises the need for strategic planning in infrastructure investment.

Government Response

TaxationTransport
Government Response
Defends government's position on rail strategy duration, highlighting that a 30-year timeframe is overly ambitious given current financial constraints. Emphasises the need to focus on achievable goals within shorter funding periods. The Minister responded that setting a strategy in legislation as inflexible is unnecessary. He also mentioned the need to provide flexibility for unforeseen circumstances such as global pandemics and technological innovations, emphasising the importance of not micromanaging the railway. Government does not intend to include specific operational requirements like timetabling and level crossings in the long-term rail strategy. It will set strategic objectives that consider environmental, passenger, connectivity and financial aspects. Emphasised that Network Rail already has a system for considering local community impacts of changes and GBR will continue this work with ORR oversight. The Minister defends clause 15, arguing it provides long-term stability for the rail industry by ensuring future Governments provide direction. He responds to proposed amendments but does not elaborate on specific policy details or funding announcements. Mather responds to concerns about conflicting priorities between mayoral combined authorities and other strategies, stating that GBR will have regard to these strategies. He also addresses the role of mayors in requesting services from GBR and acknowledges concerns from non-mayoral areas. The Minister defended the current wording of the Bill regarding GBR's duties and reporting requirements, asserting that it allows for flexibility in decision-making processes while maintaining robust accountability mechanisms. He also disagreed with specific amendments proposing detailed government intervention in rolling stock leasing arrangements.
Assessment & feedback
Summary accuracy

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