Andy Burnham sostiene che il partito laburista deve mettere l’energia e l’acqua sotto il controllo pubblico

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/may/16/andy-burnham-energy-water-under-public-control-keir-starmer

    di No_Breadfruit_4901

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    32 commenti

    1. Narcissa_Nyx on

      isn’t starmer already doing that for great british energy?

    2. Altruistic-Bat-9070 on

      The cost of doing this is huge though, so this will be interesting if they are going to borrow like mental whilst bond markets etc already arent our friend 

    3. doublejay1999 on

      some will pipe up about bond markets in a minute and I’ll be quite cross.

      edit : fucking told you.

    4. Economy_Seat_7250 on

      They all say shit like this until they get in, then the crippling reality of the public finances forces them to into inertia.

    5. HorrorAd1613 on

      labour politicians are famously competent, so putting them in charge of water and energy provision is going to go great

    6. There’s currently £40-50bn a year of mostly private money going to the energy transition, if that’s going to be public money instead then how are we going to pay for it? To say nothing of all the existing assets, either in water or energy.

      He says “under public control”, not public ownership, so I guess that explains it. But energy already has a price cap, the renewable plants are already operating under CfD contracts set by government. Energy is almost completely controlled by the regulatory bodies, water less so.

      I guess this boils down to increasing the power of Ofwat and Ofgem.

    7. Much-Calligrapher on

      Oh FFS. I had high hopes that Burnham would follow the Manchester programme to target growth and display some pragmatism.

      Instead he wants to pursue ideological projects for fringe party factions that will place greater faith in bond markets to finance the country.

      The reasons we have expensive energy are nothing to do with public vs private ownership.

      Focus on what delivers outcomes for the citizens, not what appeals to nobody Labour party members.

    8. LauraPhilps7654 on

      The biggest thing he said for me was a council house building programme on a scale not seen since WWII. One of the biggest failures of New Labour was its total disregard for council housing:

      >The official data shows that the Blair and Brown governments built 7,870 council houses (local authority tenure) over the course of 13 years. (If we don’t include 2010 – the year when David Cameron became PM – this number drops to 6,510.) Mr Copley has contrasted this figure with the record of Mrs Thatcher’s government, which never built fewer than 17,710 homes in a year.

      https://fullfact.org/economy/who-built-more-council-houses-margaret-thatcher-or-new-labour/

      We’re still living with that failure today.

    9. RespectTheBall on

      Not going to happen. Nice byelection flag to fly though.

    10. AvadaBalaclava on

      Nationalise the gas power stations and remove that bit of pricing from the market, but add a surcharge on the renewables.

    11. jimboish01 on

      Nationalisation of water shouldn’t even be a debate now. If you’re unsure why it’s so important watch Dirty Business on Channel 4.

    12. Affectionate_Flow864 on

      Imagine the dvla being in charge of if you get water and heat

    13. Double_Jab_Jabroni on

      Here come the bots to shoot it down. We currently live in a privatised system, is this the only option?!

    14. Phallic_Entity on

      Reminder that the average profit margin of electricity distributors is 2%. You spend as much subsidising the bills of people on benefits as you do on profit for the energy distributors.

    15. TheTritagonistTurian on

      Energy sure, it’s littered with money.

      What people don’t realise about water is it’s so far behind in terms of processes, people, systems and infrastructure that it needs significantly more money than what the British tax payers could afford to get it running efficiently, it’s a shame it was ever privatised to begin with but the cats out the bag now, water would only get worse under British tax payer control.

    16. AncientStaff6602 on

      If I’m being honest, energy production/supply, water, transportation should never been in private ownership.

      I would go even further and say health and education shouldn’t either.

    17. Common-Ad6470 on

      He’s not wrong, they should never have been sold off for a quick buck in the first place.

    18. TwentyBagTaylor on

      That, and EU membership. That’ll be a decent start.

    19. BroodLord1962 on

      Water should have been the first thing to put under government control, not the trains

    20. Osiryx89 on

      The UK energy industry is worth about £264bln, or roughly 10% of the national debt or £10,000 of additional spending per household.

      It’s pie in the sky stuff.

      https://www.energy-uk.org.uk/insights/uk-energy/

      >“deindustrialisation and privatisation” of Britain had left areas like Makerfield “without good jobs and people unable to afford the basics.”

      I look forward to Burnhams explanation of how privatisation and nationalism will create jobs (increasing costs), but also result in more affordable public services (reducing revenue).

    21. pintofendlesssummer on

      Yeah yeah and he’s going to give us all world peace too.

    22. hantsspur on

      He means Government control, not public control. The public will control not a single bit of it. Don’t be fooled,

    23. Iamoggierock on

      Pension investments. They can’t go bust and the private companies knew that so the level of infrastructure demise would burden the public purse massively.

    24. Majestic-Document-16 on

      Hamburg hat die Wasserversorgung vor 3Jahren rekommunalisiert, jetzt zahlen die Verbraucher um die 60% der vorherigen Rechnungen, irgendwie logisch

    25. Salty-Bid1597 on

      Just so much populist snake oil

      >Burnham said the “deindustrialisation and privatisation” of Britain had left areas like Makerfield “without good jobs and people unable to afford the basics.”

      He’s deliberately conflating two different things here and being loose with facts. Privatisation has nothing to do with deindustrialisation and if anything the former has increased the number of jobs. Makerfield deindustrialisation started in the 19th C and continued til the early 60s (at least the coal mining part) and in fact was actively accelerated by the postwar nationalisation of the coal industry.

      > “I’ve done that with buses in Greater Manchester. I was the first to do it. Margaret Thatcher deregulated them … and then they just work for the private shareholders and not for the paying public. I put them back under public control with the £2 fares..”

      Yes mate, you can set the fares at £2 by throwing buckets of central government money at them. They don’t actually cost less to run you’re just taking the money from taxpayers outside your area. Same as the SNP: it’s easy to spend other people’s money, not so easy when you have to make the sums add up. Also with the Thatcher bone… IT WAS 40 YEARS AGO! We’ve had 13 years of Labour Government since then! Half the population aren’t old enough to remember her and nobody outside the Labour ~~religion~~ party cares. (He sounds a lot like Trump here btw).

      >I wouldn’t have just gone anywhere [to] carpet bag, you know, any old constituency. It matters to me that I have a connection

      Cool story bro.

      >“We’ve got to talk seriously about reindustrialising the north-west, getting those good jobs, changing education so it’s not all about the university route but it’s also about the technical paths for kids to get into those good jobs.”

      Trump again. Industry is not coming back to the North West or anywhere else in Britain. Labour costs are too high and we don’t have the raw materials nor an empire to provide them. Globalisation is here and it’s not going away. Deal with it or spend the rest of your life tilting at windmills.

      >Burnham told the BBC that deindustrialisation had begun in the 1980s

      Patently untrue.

      This is so much disingenuous populist clap trap. Reform for the left.

    26. Shot_Heron_2782 on

      My Electricity bill states that 100% of my electricity provided to my home comes from Non Fossil Fuel.

      75% Wind/Solar

      25% Nuclear

      Yet my price per KWH is set by the Global Market rate of Gas! Because here in the UK, whatever fuel/means is used to produce the back up final power for the grid, is then set as the standard price per KWH, and as its always Gas that does that, im charged per KWH by the price of gas, even tho I dont use Gas and Gas doesn’t produce power that supplies my home!

      Its a Scam!

      Cutting this regulation would boost UK Economy by a massive amount!

      Big Oil Holds Us Hostage!

      Why?

      Because of corrupt politics and bent lobbyists!

      Tesla was correct!

      They bumped Tesla off!

      Free Power to the People!

    27. I know private water companies are rubbish at spending on repairs and infrastructure. But governments only think 5 years ahead until the next election, so governments would also delay paying for expensive repairs when they can leave it for a future government to sort out.

    28. Infamous-Style-3478 on

      Can someone ask him if he’ll tell Palantir to fuck off?

    29. UKSaint93 on

      With what money?

      gotta get the public finances in check before you can do fun things.

    30. emoMan69 on

      Is the ability to compete inherently present? For water, trains and energy (electricity and gas) it is not as pipeline availability restricts possible competition as well as wholesale and retail customers allowed to be the same company doesn’t help.

    31. UJ_Reddit on

      It doesn’t need to be privatised. Just regulated so it’s a controlled market. Competition is good – see octopus energy for example.

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