In happier news it allowed CamClegg to re-re-re-announce one or two rail projects.
Page 11 of the Together in the National Interest document offered the following tidbits:
We will further invest in infrastructure by:
- expanding our railway programme to create an �electric spine� from Southampton to Yorkshire, electrify the South Wales Valleys railways, establish a western rail link to Heathrow, invest in the Northern Hub and create enough capacity for 140,000 extra daily commutes at peak times by the end of 2019;
- moving as rapidly as possible towards a national high speed rail network by carrying forward legislation for the first phase between London and Birmingham;
- upgrading transport in the capital city through Crossrail, Thameslink and by supporting an extension of the Northern Line to Battersea Power Station;
Or were they perhaps preparing to moon, in response to the Coalition's thin document?
UPDATE: This from Globetrotter...
Am I the only person to be intrigued by the commitment to providing �enough capacity for 140,000 extra daily commutes� without saying where or when, or over what distance?
With this degree of vagueness, one might envisage delivering a vast increase in capacity by re-doubling and resignalling for 12-car trains at 2 min headways between Grosmont and Whitby, for example.
Given the Westminster village focus, one might presume that Dave �n� Nick mean journeys in and out of London, although Crossrail and Thameslink won�t be ready in the life of this coalition, and our northern friends could legitimately argue that their need is greater in the short term.
A rough estimate suggests it is equivalent to around 4% more passenger journeys per day across the network, which is barely enough to keep up with recent growth in demand.
And of course, grammatically-literate historians might argue that they are talking about increasing booking office capacity to sell that number of season tickets. Or perhaps not?

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