![[ABD Logo]](images/logo8050.gif)
The Association of British Drivers
Having spent years spending as little money as possible on roads, and deliberately creating congestion by means of road narrowing, bus lanes, and closing off side roads, the Labour government have now announced that they intend to charge drivers for the privilege of sitting in traffic jams largely caused by government incompetence and malice aforethought.|
“Threats of 'gridlock' are false. There is no long term gridlock anywhere in the world and there never will be. People will avoid travel long before they sit in gridlock. In this way congestion self-limits traffic long before gridlock.”
Paul Smith, SafeSpeed
“It seems to me that we already have a perfectly fair system of road pricing which is fuel tax.”
Jeremy Clarkson
“Our roads are vital economic arteries: the prosperity of a modern nation depends on the velocity of exchange. To be anti-car is therefore, in varying degrees, to be anti-countryside, anti-children, anti-women and anti-business.”
Daily Telegraph editorial
2006-12-02 “The last time Britain had widespread road pricing, with the ‘turnpikes’ of the 18th and 19th Centuries, the experiment ended in tears, with allegations of a crippling tax burden, self-serving, unaccountable bureaucracies and fears that free trade was being stifled.”
Dr James Taylor,
Lecturer in British History, Lancaster University. Daily Mail, 2006-12-03 “Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants. It is the creed of slaves.”
William Pitt
Prime Minister House of Commons 1783-11-18 “I don't know about you, but I'm not a spy. Neither am I having an affair or hiding a drug habit. In fact, I can't think of a single thing I do that is of interest to anyone else or how information about it might be useful. But I am desperately uncomfortable with the idea of my journeys being tracked and analysed by a faceless agency.”
“I'm going to be signing. These charges are just too much.”
“The Prime Minister's comments about not using road pricing as a stealth tax are simply not credible. I simply don't believe the Government's denial.
I know from extremely good sources that Gordon Brown and his team have had discussions about the possibility of using the revenue from road pricing to fill future black holes in public finances. Given the Chancellor's track record on stealth taxes and the fact that Transport Secretary Douglas Alexander is one of his closest allies, I think motorists should treat what the Prime Minister is saying with extreme scepticism.” “At the end of the day it is us who have the power. Stephen Ladyman, the transport minister, only has a majority of 600-and-something. You can guarantee there's more than 600 people in his constituency who have signed the petition so, he's out.”
“The Government are trying to blackmail local authorities into introducing policies which many of us think will be damaging and we're not prepared to do that. The Government have got to accept that if they want the North of England to close the productivity gap between here and the south they have to start properly investing in transport infrastructure and no amount of ducking and diving will get them out of that.”
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“It is hugely expensive to introduce — not just for the motorist, but the country. The idea that it is not going to be used as an additional tax is absurd. We are already paying a road user tax every time we sit in traffic in the form of fuel duty. This is a tax on going to work.”
