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Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin says cyclists must "do their bit" on road safety

Yesterday's speech shows a week is a long time in politics after Labour's Maria Eagle had made cycle safety a central issue...

Secretary of State for Transport Patrick McLoughlin has told the Conservative Party Conference that cyclists “need to do their bit” in ensuring roads become safer. His remarks come a week after his shadow cabinet counterpart, Maria Eagle, urged the government to implement the manifesto of The Times newspaper’s Cities Fit For Cycling campaign.

"This was the summer that Britain got cycling,” said Mr McLoughlin, after highlighting the Olympics as a major project that Britain had delivered. "The number of people cycling is soaring, but the number of accidents has gone up too. We've got to change that.

"We've got to build safety into our roads for everyone that means better design and better education too because this isn't just about getting motorists to take care, it is also about getting cyclists to do their bit too."

Those words drew loud applause from the audience, but Mr McLoughlin didn’t elaborate on what, exactly, he expected cyclists to do.

Nor was there the commitment to Cities Fit For Cycling that Ms Eagle had urged, still less any talk of what the government could do to address the situation.

That was it, as far as cycling was concerned.

Instead, his speech focused on broader transport issues as well as specific projects such as HS2, the need for a new airport in the South East and investment on alleviating pinch points on major roads.

Mr McLoughlin outlined what he described as “an outstanding programme to get Britain up to speed” including “greater investment in our roads.”

He described his job as being “to reduce the hassle of getting around,” adding, “I’m ambitious about transport because I’m ambitious about Britain. Transport is the artery of any economy.

"It gets people to work, children to school, food to shops. Everyone depends on it, every day. When transport slows, everything slows. When transport stops, everything stops.”

In a parallel universe, that might have been a lead-in to a promise of huge investment in cycling as a safe means of everyday transport, one that doesn’t slow down and stop and allows people to get on with their daily business, a change of approach similar to those that transformed the Netherlands and Denmark from the 1970s onwards.

Back in Birmingham in 2012, however, there was little prospect of that happening.

Mr McLoughlin went on: “So how do we fix it? My answer in three words: invest in infrastructure.

“Our competitors around the world are investing in transport and we must too. No big infrastructure project is done without controversy, but once they are built people rely on them.

"We need better roads too, to keep car, trucks and buses moving. Let's face it, we've underinvested as a country for years. There is too much congestion. Not enough new schemes. It's madness and we're going to get it sorted out.

"You can't just click your fingers to solve it [transport problems]. You need to think big and hold your nerve for decades."

He concluded: "We will get Britain moving again."

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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34 comments

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Mendip James | 11 years ago
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Cyclists do their bit? What fund and construct their own safe cycling paths separated from other road traffic? Do the people attending the conference consider that cyclists "doing their bit" ,perhaps staying on the left, or not running red lights is going be key in restructuring our urban transport needs? Personally I wait at lights and uphold as much respect as I can muster on the roads to avoid being branded as a cycling hooligan, but how are things going to change with such a limited and backward approach, drawing on the new social sterotype for a quick ill considered round of applause. What a great shame.

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drheaton | 11 years ago
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The major road announcement in Kettering (and Corby) just so happens to be in the same area as an upcoming by-election...

Really, what did you expect? No Government of any party is going to throw money at cycling at the expense of drivers because it's a vote loser. Just how they won't mean's test benefits for pensioners or have a stance on law and order which moves away from custodial sentences towards community sentences...

Sadly, the government doesn't do what is best or what is needed, it only ever does what it needs to stay in power which means pandering to their core vote at every turn. In this government's case that means middle class southerners living in leafy Oxfordshire and driving Range Rovers.

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Campag_10 | 11 years ago
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It's not surprising the conference cheered the jibe at cyclists. Did you see the audience? Mostly middle aged and overweight.

When will the Conservatives realise that cycling is a £3 billion per annum industry? For most people their spend on cycling is in addition to the cost of running a car.

If our roads can be made more hospitable for cyclists then increasing numbers will switch to cycling, thus reducing urban congestion.

Alleviating pinch points is a myth - all road building achieves is to create more space for cars and lorries to queue for the next pinch point. Look at the effect of M25 widening – journey times have not been reduced.

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ALIHISGREAT | 11 years ago
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I do my bit for road safety...

It involves recognizing my mortality...

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