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This would be, what, the fifth broken promise for Leeds in the past 25 years? We were promised electric trains, Eurostar, a tram system, a trolleybus system after the tram was cancelled, and now HS2's eastern leg.
My understanding is that the English green movement is a relative embarrassment for other European green activists because of their obsession with opposing HS2, incidentally.
I believe this is how it works on Northern too; the CIS screens would display a Harrogate line train as the "xx48 to Poppleton' to dissuade people taking the slow way to York.
I imagine that's because Evergreen 3 made it impossible to find somewhere to suggest piloting his absolutely bonkers "replace the trains with bus lanes" proposal.
If anything, the extra financial measures to help the country through the pandemic has kind of exposed the "national credit card" argument as a myth even for most Tories.
It doesn't look too much changed from the previous plans; you can see the 1855 station building in the background, although it looks like the mini-bus station plans have been amended.
This makes sense, given the news is that the news since the budget has focused a lot on the 1855 building...
Even if implied repeal was a viable strategy, the Paris Agreement was ratified before the Phase 1 Act was given royal assent, so that way is out of the window.
The long hybrid bill process will probably also make judges wary of striking down the law like that.
After the South Yorkshire section got moved away from Meadowhall, the non-Sheffield councils started pushing for a parkway station, but I'm not sure if anything's happened on that front recently.
The current government has a rather dim view of long-term thinking, though; having stub tunnels at OOC for HS2 to link to HS1 if it was ever needed was a rounding error in the budget but was ditched pretty early on.
For some reason, Boris Johnson really likes vanity projects to be near tons of unexplored WW2 ordnance: first Boris Island, then the Irish Sea Bridge.
One wonders if there’s still some bombs under the waters of the Thames near the Embankment.
I can see Sunak saying something like "we said we would invest in the North and we will, we said we would invest in the towns left behind and we will, so we are bringing forward plans to restore the railway line between Skipton and Colne that was cut over half a century ago".
Or something like...
I think Skipton–Colne has more of a chance than some people are intimating, not because of whether it would be value for money, but because the politics are in its favour. The new NPR/HS2 minister does have Colne in his patch, and he's been pretty vocal about it in the past. Skipton's MP...