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Economic Development

Government rail plan is 'better' than Northern leaders wanted, Prime Minister insists

Boris Johnson has defended the controversial rail plan at the opening session of the CBI Conference

Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaking at the Port of Tyne, in South Shields, during the CBI annual conference.(Image: PA)

The Government’s controversial rail plan is “better” than the improvements demanded by Northern leaders, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has insisted.

Politicians, business leaders and industry figures have lined up to criticise the Government since the Integrated Rail Review last week downgraded long called-for improvements to the rail network in the North East.

However, speaking at the opening session of the CBI conference, held at the Port of Tyne in South Shields, he said critics of the plans had been “missing the point”.

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In a speech in which he twice lost his place and talked at length about a visit to Peppa Pig World, Mr Johnson said that the Government’s plan would bring faster journeys from Newcastle to London and Birmingham.

But he did not address concerns that the rail plan fails to address the North’s main demand of increasing capacity on the rail network to improve reliability.

The Prime Minister said: “I must say that I thought, as a lesson in what happens when you tell the British people we’re investing £96bn in the biggest railway programme for 100 years, some of the coverage was missing the point, let me put it that way.

“So, Birmingham to Newcastle is 40 minutes quicker under the IRP; from Newcastle to London will have 20 minutes shaved off because of the upgrades to the East Coast Mainline.