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Number of city rail commuters in England and Wales passes pre-Covid levels

1 day ago
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The number of rail passengers travelling into cities in England and Wales has overtaken pre-Covid levels but changing work and travel patterns have eased overcrowding on the morning commute, official statistics show,Almost 1,9 million people took trains into cities on a typical weekday last autumn, the highest figure since the records were first collated in 2010,However, there were still about 13% fewer passengers arriving during the morning peak than in 2019, showing that the return to traditional nine-to-five office working remains some way off, despite recent pressure on staff from some firms,Arrivals into every station in London grew in the 12 months to autumn 2024, with particularly rapid growth at Paddington and Liverpool Street stations, both served by the Elizabeth line.

The data suggests that the line, fully opened in 2023, has taken the pressure off other trains, with overcrowding in the capital down from 2019 levels.Now busier trains into Birmingham are matching London for the squeeze on commuters, according to the Department for Transport.Five Thameslink and West Midland services were the most overcrowded, with the 7.30am Bedford to Three Bridges having an 184% load factor – or almost twice as many passengers as seats – when it reached London St Pancras.Southwestern and Chiltern services made up the rest of the top 10 most overcrowded trains recorded by the DfT.

The total number of people travelling into cities outside London remains below pre-pandemic levels, at about 660,000 daily arrivals compared with 730,000 in 2019.The DfT figures allow for standing capacity on many London commuter services, with almost one in four passengers standing on arrival in the morning.It found that average overcrowding – or “passengers in excess of capacity” – on midweek (Tuesday to Thursday) morning arrivals to the capital had increased slightly in the last 12 months to 1.6%, a figure now matched by Birmingham, with trains arriving at Bristol and Sheffield stations ranking as the next most crowded, after rapid growth in rail commuting last year.The DfT said that while directly equivalent statistics on crowding were not available, British rail passenger numbers appeared to be recovering faster than those in France, Germany or Italy, with growth of 9% last year compared with 5-7% in the three biggest EU economies.

Public transport campaigners heralded the figures as underlining the return of rail, after passenger numbers dropped to as little as 5% of pre-pandemic levels in 2020, followed by pay freezes and industrial unrest.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionBen Plowden, of the Campaign for Better Transport, said: “Gloomy predictions for the future of rail at the time of the pandemic have proven wrong: rail is back in a big way, boosting our economy, keeping workers moving and saving our streets from gridlock.“The fact that passenger arrivals are up while overcrowding is down is partly due to the huge success of the Elizabeth line.With more bold projects like this we could transform cities and improve daily life for vast numbers of people.An expanded rail network combined with more affordable fares could really bring about a rail revolution.

”Rail fares are expected to continue to rise above inflation, however, as revenue is still significantly lower than before the pandemic, with more people travelling off-peak,The report noted that Southwestern, once the railway’s most lucrative commuter network, had roughly two-thirds of its previous demand, now concentrated from Tuesday to Thursday,A number of businesses in the City, including banks and hedge funds, have been pushing staff to return full-time to the office in recent months,However, recruitment firms say workers fear the impact on their wellbeing, as well as the cost of commuting,Hybrid working is now the standard mode for more than a quarter (28%) of working adults in the UK, according to the Office for National Statistics.

politicsSee all
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Diane Abbott’s Labour suspension must be resolved ‘as swiftly as possible’, says minister – as it happened

Good morning and welcome to our coverage of UK politics. We’re now in recess but we’ll still be bringing you all the news from across the country including continued reaction to the suspension of Diane Abbott.This morning, a minister has denied the veteran MP’s assertion that “it is obvious this Labour leadership wants me out”.Exchequer secretary to the Treasury James Murray told Times Radio:That’s absolutely not the case.What’s happened is Diane has made some comments which come on the back of previous comments which she made and for which she apologised some time ago

about 14 hours ago
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Labour MPs challenge Richard Tice over Reform UK’s plan to scrap green projects

A group of nearly 60 Labour MPs has written to Richard Tice challenging the Reform UK deputy leader’s pledge to rip up green energy contracts if his party wins power and questioning if he appreciated the impact this could have on the economy.Led by Polly Billington, the East Thanet MP, and signed by 58 others who have sustainable energy projects in their constituencies, the letter said Tice appeared to have “under-appreciated the growth potential of the green transition” when he wrote to eight leading energy firms warning that to bid for new contracts carried “significant” risk.The MPs’ letter said growth in the clean energy economy was 10% in 2024, and asked Tice: “When you made these threats, were you aware you were threatening one of Britain’s strongest drivers of growth?”It also cited estimates from the Confederation of British Industry saying the industry supported more than 950,000 often well-paid jobs in the UK, many outside London and the south-east, and asked if Tice saw the CBI as part of the “unquestioned liberal progressive orthodoxy”, which he has blamed for promoting net zero measures.Tice’s letter, an example of which he tweeted, warned energy firms against taking part in the next series of bids to apply for guaranteed minimum prices for clean power provision, formally known as allocation round 7 (AR7).If a Nigel Farage-led government took power in Westminster, Tice told the companies, it would reassess net zero commitments, adding: “As a first step, we will seek to strike down all contracts signed under AR7

about 18 hours ago
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Grant Shapps defends use of superinjunction to suppress Afghan data leak

The former defence secretary Grant Shapps has defended the use of an unprecedented superinjunction to suppress a data breach that led to the UK government relocating 15,000 Afghans.The Afghanistan Response Route (ARR) was created in haste after it emerged that personal information about 18,700 Afghans who had applied to come to the UK had been leaked in error by a British defence official in early 2022.It has also emerged that details of members of the SAS and MI6 were among more than 100 Britons named in the database.Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Shapps, who was defence secretary from 31 August 2023 to 5 July 2024 and was in post while the superinjunction was imposed on the incident, said his focus after the leak was on “sorting out the mess and saving lives”.The superinjunction lapsed on Tuesday, when a high court judge concluded the threat to the 18,700 Afghans was no longer very significant

about 20 hours ago
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Labour suspends Diane Abbott for second time over racism comments

Diane Abbott has been suspended from the Labour party for a second time after saying she did not regret her past remarks on racism, as Keir Starmer once again attempted to reassert his grip over his backbenchers.The veteran MP now faces an investigation over her defence of remarks more than two years ago that people of colour experienced racism “all their lives”, which was different from the “prejudice” experienced by Jewish people, Irish people and Travellers.In a statement to Newsnight on Thursday evening, Abbott said: “It is obvious this Labour leadership wants me out. My comments in the interview … were factually correct, as any fair-minded person would accept.”In the interview with the BBC earlier on Thursday, Abbott, the first black woman elected to parliament, had said: “Clearly, there must be a difference between racism which is about colour and other types of racism because you can see a Traveller or a Jewish person walking down the street, you don’t know

1 day ago
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Spies and SAS personnel among 100-plus Britons included in Afghan data leak

Details of members of the SAS are among more than 100 Britons named in the database of 18,700 Afghans, the accidental leak of which by a defence official led to thousands being secretly relocated to the UK.Defence sources said the highly sensitive document contained names and email addresses belonging to people sponsoring or linked to some individual cases. Personal information about MI6 officers was also included.The identities of members of the SAS and MI6 are a closely guarded secret, and the possibility that such information could have ended up in the public domain was a source of significant official concern.SAS and other special forces officers were involved in assessing whether Afghans who said they were members of the elite 333 and 444 units, known as the Triples, were allowed to come to the UK

1 day ago
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Voting age to be lowered to 16 across UK by next general election

The voting age will be lowered to 16 across the UK by the next general election in a major change of the democratic system, despite some concerns within Labour that it could benefit smaller parties like the Greens and Reform UK.The government said it would be fairer for 16- and 17-year-olds, many of whom already work and are able to serve in the military. Keir Starmer said it was important that teenagers who paid taxes had their say on how the money was spent.The move brings voting age for the whole of the UK to 16. Scotland and Wales have already made the change for Holyrood, Senedd and council elections

1 day ago
societySee all
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Two UK charities donate millions to Israeli settlement in occupied West Bank

about 18 hours ago
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Hopes of averting doctors’ strike after ‘constructive’ meeting with Streeting

1 day ago
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Patients in England’s most deprived areas wait longer for NHS treatment, data reveals

1 day ago
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Resident doctors’ pay demands won’t get the public on side | Letters

1 day ago
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Autism is not an excuse for bad behaviour | Letter

1 day ago
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Join the army, work full-time … and now vote: what 16-year-olds can do in the UK

1 day ago