Labour said on Wednesday it would urgently consider terminating beleaguered Avanti West Coast’s contract if it wins the general election. Shadow transport secretary Louise Haigh said the company had provided passengers with “woeful service” on the West Coast Main Line, which connects London all the way to Edinburgh. According to figures from the Office of Rail and Road, Avanti had the third worst reliability of every train company in Britain over the 12 months to the end of March.
The performance has been such that Greater Manchester’s Labour Mayor Andy Burnham said in March he’d “completely run out of patience”. The Conservative government gave Avanti, which is owned by the transport giant Firstgroup and Trenitalia, a new long-term contract last year. The agreement was originally agreed at nine years but has a clause which means it can be terminated at three months’ notice after October 2026.
The comments come amid speculation Richard Branson’s Virgin Trains could return to the West Coast Main Line under an open-access model. Open access operators take full commercial risk and are not subject to government franchising fees. It is a model designed to boost competition against mainstay train companies like Avanti.
Speaking to Sky News, the shadow transport secretary also faced questions on Labour’s plans to nationalise Britain’s railways . “Our commitment is to bring in those contracts as they expire or when they are breached,” she said. “I anticipa.
