Ministers should renationalise the Southern rail service, following weeks of disruption for passengers, Jeremy Corbyn has said.

The Labour leader said the "misery" that those travelling to London had faced made a "very good case" for a change of ownership.
Southern passengers have faced delays, cancellations and a reduced timetable amid staff shortages and strikes.
The operator is in a dispute with the RMT union over the role of guards.
Two days of talks aimed at averting a five-day strike by the union are due to begin later at the conciliation service Acas.
Southern has promised to run 60% of its normal timetable if the strike, due to begin on Monday, goes ahead.
The
company is also facing fresh strike action after the TSSA union said it
would be balloting workers in a dispute over ticket office closures.
'Enormous mistake'
"I
want to see Southern back in public ownership. I don't believe it's
fulfilling its obligations under the franchise it was given, " Mr Corbyn
said at a leadership rally in Brighton.
He
said that it was a "enormous mistake" not to take all the train
operating franchises back into public ownership after the 2001 collapse
of the company then running the network, Railtrack, and he re-stated his
commitment to renationalise each train service as its contract expires.
At
the rally, Mr Corbyn also said the government should have intervened to
prevent the financial difficulties at the retailer BHS, which went into
administration in April.
Earlier, Mr Corbyn said he was disappointed at an attack on him by
David Blanchflower, an economist who has resigned from the committee
advising the shadow chancellor John McDonnell.
Mr Blanchflower
said Mr Corbyn had no credible economic policy and was more interested
in addressing rallies than leading the party to power.

Mr Corbyn
said: "I'm disappointed because he was helping us, we were developing
and are continuing to develop a very strong and very credible economic
policy which is about dealing with inequality in Britain and the need
for investment in Britain by the promotion of a National Investment
Bank."
He spoke to about 500 people outside the rally, standing on top of a fire engine, before addressing 1,000 inside the event.
Scores
of his fans, many wearing "Jeremy for Labour" or "I love Jeremy"
t-shirts, queued for hours to get a seat at the rally in the Hilton
Metropole.
Meanwhile Mr Corbyn's challenger for the party
leadership, Owen Smith, will promise the "biggest boost to living
standards for a generation" with a pay rise for five million workers if
he becomes the next prime minister.
The party would push the
minimum wage up to £8.25 and force employers to give it to all adults on
the payroll, not just those over 25, he is expected to pledge at a
speech in Milton Keynes later.
No comments:
Post a Comment