Mark Casci: Stench of hypocrisy over British Steel collapse
However this request was ultimately declined by the Government, placing a massive section of the UK economy into jeopardy.
For clarity, the Brexit related issues British Steel cites take the form of sizeable slump in orders from Europe owing to the ongoing prospect of Britain exiting the EU with no withdrawal agreement.
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Hide AdWith Mrs May’s time in office potentially set to come to an end within days, and the leading candidates to replace her favouring the folly of leaving without a deal, this concern appears more and more valid.
Let us be absolutely clear, this is not some isolated local job loss story.
British Steel is among the most iconic corporate brands in our nation’s history and the news that it faces collapse is of colossal importance to the entire country.
Four and half thousand staff’s jobs are now at risk, the majority of which are in the Yorkshire and Humber region at its bases in Skinningrove and Scunthorpe.
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Hide AdA further 20,000 jobs in the company’s supply chain are also at risk. And then there is the far from insignificant issue that as much as 95 per cent of the rails supplied to Network Rail are produced by British Steel.
This is a crisis, and one that requires Government intervention to solve it. Alas, it has been made clear that no such intervention is to be forthcoming.
Business Secretary Greg Clark issued a statement in which he cited regulations on state aide.
“The Government can only act within the law, which requires any financial support to a steel company to be on a commercial basis.
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Hide Ad“I have been advised that it would be unlawful to provide a guarantee or loan on the terms of any proposals that the company or any other party has made.”
Without specifying which laws he was adhering to we must assume Mr Clark was referring to the common ones observed around the European Union.
The problem with this statement is that it seems to ignore that these regulations can be circumvented.
The Italian Government stepped in to save the Ilva plant in 2017 by nationalising it.
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Hide AdAs well as its UK operations, British Steel also operates plants in France and the Netherlands. You can be almost certain that the Governments in those two nations will be extremely unlikely to allow these plants to close.
The Conservative Government of this country has repeated ad nauseam for the past few years that it believes it has a duty to deliver Brexit.
However if it is to fulfil this mission it must also have a moral duty to protect against any damage that may be incurred in the process.
The ongoing failure of leadership from Government to deliver a viable means of exiting the EU that enjoyed the support of MPs has led us to this place, meaning that a No Deal Brexit and the disastrous economic impact it will have on the country, is currently the easiest and most probable means of delivering the result of the 2016 referendum.
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Hide AdIt did not have to be this way but ideology replaced leadership a long time ago in the corridors of Westminster.
The fate of a massive employer now hangs on the hope that a new buyer can be found, and one that is prepared to shoulder the incumbrances attached to it. Tens of thousands of lives face being ruined by this farce.
It is a mess of Government’s own creation and the fact that it is unwilling to clean it up speaks to a rank hypocrisy that none of us should be prepared to stomach.