
The Manchester mayor is tapping into deep public frustration over the water industry but at some stage he needs to say what he means
There ought to be a rule to oblige politicians advocating “stronger public control” of an essential service or sector to say what, precisely, they mean. Public “ownership” is easy to understand – it’s nationalisation. But Andy Burnham, when he cites water and energy as targets for greater public control, seems to imply something else. What?
Would he, for instance, torpedo the government’s current plans for water, notably the “once-in-a-generation” reset of regulation in England and Wales via the clean water bill due in the autumn? Or is he merely saying Thames Water should be tipped into special administration, which may happen anyway without a shove from a new prime minister?
Continue reading...United Kingdom
EUROPE
Related News

Chip stocks bounce back as OpenAI files for Wall Street float – business live
16h ago
Somali referee denied US entry, dropped from FIFA World Cup 2026
19h ago

Ebola cases reach more than 500
1d ago

Zelensky says he had 'positive' talks with Trump envoys on Ukraine war
1d ago
Depression in romantic relationships: You, me and the illness
1d ago