LNW-GW Joint
Veteran Member
It's a critical week for government spending, and who knows how it will affect the railway - presumably Jeremy Hunt is about to tell us.
However, there's a groundswell against HS2 for the alleged £100 billion it will cost over the next decade, and how that relates to the national "black hole".
Something like £8 billion has already been spent, and £18 billion has been contracted and is work in progress.
Most of this is on Phase 1 but there has been some enabling spend on Phase 2a, and design/legal work on Phase 2b Crewe-Manchester to get the Bill through parliament.
Simon Jenkins has posted a highly critical piece in the Guardian, largely on the grounds that the money should be spent on more pressing things (schools, hospitals, and normal railways).
Simon knows his railway, having been a member of the BR Board and is a specialist in railway architecture.
He has been a long-term opponent of HS2 and mega-projects generally.
But he bashes HS2 as an un-needed white elephant, and wants it scrapped despite the progress made and cancellation costs which would be incurred.
www.theguardian.com
Luckily, the Tory front bench probably doesn't read the Guardian, but there are broadly similar articles in the Telegraph and Times.
We'll see on Thursday if the Autumn Statement calls for any cuts in the HS2 plans, which currently supports 30,000 jobs.
However, there's a groundswell against HS2 for the alleged £100 billion it will cost over the next decade, and how that relates to the national "black hole".
Something like £8 billion has already been spent, and £18 billion has been contracted and is work in progress.
Most of this is on Phase 1 but there has been some enabling spend on Phase 2a, and design/legal work on Phase 2b Crewe-Manchester to get the Bill through parliament.
Simon Jenkins has posted a highly critical piece in the Guardian, largely on the grounds that the money should be spent on more pressing things (schools, hospitals, and normal railways).
Simon knows his railway, having been a member of the BR Board and is a specialist in railway architecture.
He has been a long-term opponent of HS2 and mega-projects generally.
But he bashes HS2 as an un-needed white elephant, and wants it scrapped despite the progress made and cancellation costs which would be incurred.

The real ‘black hole’ in the UK’s finances is HS2 – let’s kill off this monstrosity for good | Simon Jenkins
Successive prime ministers have lacked the courage to end this vanity project. Is Rishi Sunak any different, asks Guardian columnist Simon Jenkins
The real ‘black hole’ in the UK’s finances is HS2 – let’s kill off this monstrosity for good
Sunak’s chancellor claims he wants to crack down on “outrageous” waste of public money. Yet in 2018 it was revealed that £4.1bn had been spent before work even began, with “consultants” getting £600m. The extravagance of the project has been condemned by Whitehall economists, public accounts committee chairs and project assessors galore. Its backers now claim it is too far advanced to cancel, with giant boring engines deep under the Chilterns. Yet those with noses firmly in the public trough always claim this. A New Jersey governor, Chris Christie, famously halted a rail tunnel under the Hudson river by simply ordering the contractors to fill in the hole.
Luckily, the Tory front bench probably doesn't read the Guardian, but there are broadly similar articles in the Telegraph and Times.
We'll see on Thursday if the Autumn Statement calls for any cuts in the HS2 plans, which currently supports 30,000 jobs.