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Manchester and Liverpool mayors press brand-new train, pushing federal government

The mayors of Manchester and Liverpool on Monday published plans for a new train between the two northern English cities, raising pressure on the Labour federal government to deliver on pledges to raise financial investment.

At an event on the sidelines of the Labour Celebration's yearly conference in Liverpool, the city's mayor Steve Rotherham and Manchester's Andy Burnham published a prospectus for a 17 billion pound ($ 23 billion) train.

Rail links in between the two cities, the 3rd- and fifth-largest metropolitan areas in England, are afflicted by traffic jams on lines that date back to the Victorian era.

The 2 mayors stated the new line would be spent for utilizing funds earmarked for the cancelled Birmingham to Manchester leg of the HS2 high-speed railway line from London, axed last year by then-Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.

The relocation from the mayors, both Labour Celebration representatives, represents a rising pattern of regional leaders staking claims to greater autonomy, asserting impact over local facilities and challenging London's supremacy.

Previously on Monday the transportation secretary Louise Haigh explained the Liverpool-Manchester line as important however said there was no single pot of HS2 cash that could be deployed readily.

The prospectus said the brand-new railway could include around 7 billion pounds in financial output each year to the 150 billion-pound Manchester-Liverpool economy.

There will be genuine chance for some of our people to operate in Manchester, and individuals from Manchester to work here, stated Liverpool city region mayor Rotherham.

That actually does shrink the whole of the north west and make that functional financial geography far more coherent.

(source: Reuters)