#renationalised
ALL UK water companies should be renationalised.

I can't think of any other country where the supply of a basic human need (water) is in the hands of companies who aim to profiteer from it.
January 16, 2026 at 11:25 AM
Thames Water's debt is nearing £20 billion, and they've raised bills by a third, but somehow their shareholders are still profiting!

Now their customers want Ofwat to reject a bailout deal that would write off debts by raising bills, and are calling for the company to be renationalised instead.
January 13, 2026 at 10:14 AM
We’re now informed that the earliest we can expect water is Tuesday. That’s four straight days without water.

South East Water needs to be renationalised right now, and David Hinton the CEO should be fired and certainly receive no bonus.
January 12, 2026 at 7:57 AM
The SNP renationalised ScotRail in 2022 and abolished peak fares in 2023 - making rail travel more affordable, not just the occasional discount. While labour announces headlines, Holyrood delivered lasting change. That's what a government committed to public transport looks like.
January 6, 2026 at 12:25 PM
Still haven’t renationalised the water companies, food cost increasing, fuel costs, clothing etc.
all the breaks seem to be for the ultra rich, not the 99%.
This government is weak, weak at home and weak abroad.
With war on the horizon, we need strong leadership.
January 7, 2026 at 8:06 AM
That's why ARmed Forces housing has been renationalised by this Labour Government!

Except they're not banging on about it - another communication error.
December 10, 2025 at 8:35 AM
This is all very well but 3 observations:

*It'll be Oct 2027 before all passenger services are renationalised
*Rolling stock remains in private hands, at huge cost to the taxpayer
*Rail freight should also be renationalised to secure full environmental & cost benefits.
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
Branding and logo for Great British Railways unveiled
The new red, white and blue branding mirrors the colours of the Union Flag, and will start to appear from next year.
www.bbc.co.uk
December 9, 2025 at 9:00 AM
Genuinely bemused by UK Gov wielding soft power correctly for the new renationalised railway regime by rolling out the DLC for train sims first.
December 9, 2025 at 8:37 AM
So this is what our renationalised railways will look like. Apart from the yellow nose cone (not required by Standards or necessary) it’s not too bad. Though all this red, white & blue is a bit tedious. Main thing is the BR double arrow has been left as the design classic it is. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
December 9, 2025 at 10:51 AM
Yes, the monetarists and Thatcher's love-affair with Hayek twaddle. They convinced large sections of the public that British Rail was no good and replaced it with a privatised shambles. Now so bad it had to be renationalised (after a fashion). They have learning difficulties.
December 5, 2025 at 2:42 PM
Let Thames Water go bankrupt so it can be renationalised. No more horrendous price rises like this year.
December 3, 2025 at 9:49 AM
Renationalise them.

If this government had any sort of moral compass, they would have renationalised water when they first stepped into office.
November 30, 2025 at 3:14 PM
I signed up for the Severn Trent customer survey program some time ago, and sometimes I do feel sorry for the people who read through it.

I try to be constructive, but also sometimes I write "you should be renationalised" in every box (where it's relevant).
November 26, 2025 at 5:49 PM
hey 'centrists' if labour have 'renationalised rail' why don't they reduce the cost of tickets?

something to think about.
November 23, 2025 at 3:39 PM
Seems only the bits that are not profitable or a bit too complex.. get renationalised!?
November 23, 2025 at 9:22 AM
But gas, electricity, council tax a d water still all going up. They had a landslide, could have renationalised the lot
November 23, 2025 at 5:04 PM
'In running a national railway, public ownership provides a cheaper, more effective service. That’s why ScotRail was renationalised. We’ll have to wait until we’re out of the failing UK to take back control of our rail infrastructure.'
Leah Gunn Barrett, via 'Dear Scotland'.
dearscotland.substac...
February 1, 2025 at 9:00 AM
Depends how it's renationalised. I'd suggest a new law allowing companies that run critical infrastructure to be fined massive fines for profiteering with the government being top of the list of creditors. Company goes bust, shareholders get nothing, government take assets.
November 26, 2024 at 12:55 PM
Thames water must go bust, its shareholders must be rinsed, its managers should face charges for embezzlement, and the business should be renationalised for £1
December 14, 2024 at 6:44 AM
Yes, also to some extent the Overground, though Ken Livingston started it, and he renationalised the Underground after privatisation failed there.
November 30, 2024 at 7:46 AM
UK railways are being renationalised... by foreign state-owned companies

bit.ly/tbrRze
Rail 683 The railways are being renationalised – by foreigners
In a way, it’s funny. The Brpitish railway system is slowly being renationalised, but not by our own government. Rather, it is being taken over by foreign state-owned railways that now have an interest in almost half the franchises, and in one of the three open access operators as well. This has been highlighted by two further incursions in recent weeks, although the issue has barely been picked up in the national media – even in the jingoistic Daily Mail (which recently warned that French unemployed workers would be invading Kent thanks to new Lille-Canterbury trains, even though providing such a service is fraught with difficulties and unlikely to be cheap enough for the jobless). First, there was the successful bid by Abellio – the bizarre name given to the overseas arm of Dutch railways – for the short Greater Anglia franchise that will run from February next year to the summer of 2014. Abellio, which already runs Northern and Merseyrail in joint operations with Serco, outbid Go-Ahead and Stagecoach to take over the franchise that had previously been run by National Express (ruled out at an earlier stage). Then there was the announcement that Grand Central, the open access operator running trains to the north out of King’s Cross, has been taken over by Arriva, aka Deutsche Bahn, which is less coy about using its name in the UK than the Dutch (aka Nederlandse Spoorwegen, admittedly a bit of a mouthful). Let’s dispense with the notion, tweeted to me by several people, that DB will close down Grand Central as it did Wrexham & Shropshire. That’s clearly a nonsense since, unlike with Wrexham, DB does not run the main franchise on the same lines. Of course, that could happen if it bids for East Coast, but that thought is for another day. Rather, Arriva clearly sees open access as a potential growth area, especially in light of the recent review by the Office of Rail Regulation that wants to encourage more operators to come forward (more of that in a future column). DB already has a controlling interest in Chiltern and a half share with the Hong Kong-owned MTR in London Overground, while through Arriva it operates the CrossCountry and the Wales franchises. The French have been here for rather longer, in the form of the part share owned by SNCF in Keolis, the joint venture partner with Go-Ahead in Govia (which has three franchises – Southeastern, Southern and London Midland). So we have the Germans, the Dutch and the French, and now the Spanish are keen to join in the fun as well. Renfe, the Spanish state-owned operator, failed to pre-qualify in previous attempts because the Department for Transport decided that the company did not have sufficient local knowledge, and barred it from bidding. But Teófilio Serrano, the president of Renfe who was visiting London earlier this month, told me that the company intends to pursue the British market: “It is the main market in Europe. Most others are for public service obligation railways, while in the UK all the train services are available for franchise.” The company is now looking at franchises such as Great Western, East Coast and c2c, all of which are coming up in 2012 and beyond. As an aside, there really does not seem much point to the pre-qualification requirement in franchising, as it slows down the process – if Renfe did not have enough knowledge initially, surely it would have developed it during the course of preparing the bid. The subtext of Serrano’s thinking is clear – Britain is an easy touch for these foreign operators as we are the most open economy. But does this do UK plc any good at all? Actually, this foreign invasion by state-owned companies is not funny, it’s tragic. Rather, it is a reflection of the way that we are happy to open up our economy to foreign interests, who in response protect their own markets. It is just like the rolling stock market, where Japanese companies are allowed to bid but make it impossible for their European rivals to sell to their home market. I am not being xenophobic – the foreign influx has undoubtedly brought in some new ideas. Nor am I suggesting that these foreign operators are not capable of doing a very good job – indeed, Northern won Train Operator of the Year at last year’s National Transport Awards. But while Northern’s funding for the Cyclepoint at Leeds station, where people can hire bikes easily, was an example of innovation, there have also been criticisms about overcrowding and lack of accurate information. Indeed, that mirrors the performance of most of these foreign-owned franchises – they have been good in parts, but not set the world alight. So exactly why is the Government allowing this quiet takeover to happen, without any discussion of the questions it raises? And there are several. Firstly, these state-owned railways do not have transparent accounting systems. That means it is easier for them to borrow money cheaply, allowing them to outbid commercial rivals. If, as expected in the forthcoming franchise review, investment becomes a greater requirement of franchise bids, that will give them an unfair advantage. Secondly, if they do manage to make a profit out of the franchise (which, after all, is the whole idea), then the money leeches out of the British rail system into (effectively) the coffers of foreign governments. Would it not, at the very least, be better if the money went into our own Treasury’s empty pockets? Thirdly, by depriving home-grown companies of the chance to operate British franchises, it removes the opportunity for them to gain expertise for future bids both here and abroad. It is interesting that Arriva, the most successful of the bus companies in gaining franchises in Europe, has now been taken over by a state-owned firm. Finally, if foreign state-owned firms can bid, why can’t the Department’s own Directly Operated Railways, which currently runs East Coast, remain a player in the industry? It would, as I have suggested in the past, act as a benchmark for costs. This is an issue that should be picked up by the Commons Transport Committee, which under the chairmanship of Louise Ellman is showing signs of having teeth, as witnessed by the recent HS2 report that asks searching questions of the Government’s strategy. It should ask what are the benefits of this laissez faire policy or, specifically, what is the strategy behind allowing our railways to be dominated by state-owned foreign companies? In truth, solid as they are, they are not the whizzy gung-ho capitalists that the privatisation was supposed initially to attract. We may indeed be grateful for that, but this quiet invasion suggests that the Department does not have a clue in answering my famous question: “what is franchising for?” Can the purpose really be to allow foreign governments to make a profit out of our railways? Answers, please.
t.co
January 22, 2025 at 3:29 AM
Interesting looking through a few polls on whether UK public thinks railways should be renationalised. Strong support over last year or so
December 8, 2024 at 10:33 AM
South Western Railway will be the first rail operator renationalised by the Labour government after it passed a law last week👏

www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
South Western Railway first to be renationalised under Labour
The rail operator will be renationalised in May, as part of the government's manifesto promise.
www.bbc.co.uk
December 3, 2024 at 6:56 PM
Impeccable timing: the day my @MLCleaningUp
episode with Julia Pyke, Financing Director of EDF
@SizewellC airs, French gov announces that EDF is to be renationalised. Why? The longer-term reason is that EDF is in need of vast infusions of new...
November 13, 2024 at 4:39 AM
The money and asset stripping will continue.

When it’s renationalised, the Government will give investors back their initial investment money.
December 23, 2024 at 8:55 PM