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Former health minister Thérèse Coffey claims plan to boost cycling and walking is "anti-driver"

The Tory politician who briefly served as deputy prime minister to Liz Truss opposed the £5m active travel scheme in her constituency, claiming it "fails to deliver and antagonises", and the "woefully bad" consultation "would be deemed unlawful" in court...

Thérèse Coffey, the Conservative politician who for a brief period during the autumn of 2022 served as health secretary during Liz Truss' stint as prime minister, has lashed out at an active travel project in her Suffolk constituency, claiming that it is "anti-driver".

Ms Coffey suggested the £5 million of funding for the Woodbridge active travel scheme would be better spent providing cycling proficiency courses at local schools, improving crossing points for pedestrians and cyclists, and repairing road and pavement surfaces, Suffolk News reports.

Woodbridge active travel project (Beta Streets/Suffolk County Council)

[📷: BetaStreets/Suffolk County Council]

Suffolk County Council says the proposals, including a 20mph zone, shared-use paths, modal filters and footpath improvements, have been designed using a public consultation, stakeholder engagement and analysis of traffic data, in a bid to "to make Woodbridge's streets better-connected and more people-friendly".

> Motorists furious at width of £1.2m cycle lane project claim "utterly absurd" scheme an "attack on your right to drive a car"

"We want to make it easier to choose more active ways of getting around. Increased active travel has been shown to benefit mental and physical health, improve air quality, reduce traffic congestion and noise pollution, and increase safety," the project's website states alongside artist's impressions of how the completed scheme could look.

However, Ms Coffey weighed in on the scheme to suggest that "active travel should support those who want to walk and cycle more readily, but should not be anti-driver", before questioning the consultation.

Woodbridge active travel project (Beta Streets/Suffolk County Council)

"Pretty much every proposal fails to deliver and antagonises rather than encourages," she said. "The survey to gather feedback is woefully bad. It does not set out clearly the different options being considered. I expect it would be deemed unlawful if taken to court. I would consider this consultation to be so bad that it needs to be done again, allowing people to comment far more readily on the proposals being made, including being able to keep a copy of the comments provided."

Woodbridge active travel project (Beta Streets/Suffolk County Council)

The consultation closed on 9 April, Suffolk County Council reporting that it had received over 2,100 responses, with the results and next steps to be made available in the "summer of 2024".

The "anti-driver" rhetoric of Ms Coffey's criticism has become fairly typical of political figures from the party she represents, the Conservatives' party conference last autumn hearing Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Transport Secretary Mark Harper talk of the so-called "war on motorists" and that they are "proudly pro-car".

> 'The War on the Motorist' deconstructed — looking at the truth behind the myths

Cycling UK expressed disappointment with the strategy, accusing the Conservatives of an "ill-fated attempt to win" votes with pro-motoring policies "undermining" active travel success".

Likewise, Active Travel Commissioner Chris Boardman urged Sunak to "stick with" policies promoting "fantastic" active travel plans. Boardman also admitted that the language of the Prime Minister's announcement, which called schemes such as low-traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs) and 20mph zones "hare-brained" and committed to "slamming the brakes on the war on motorists", was "not the language I would choose" and called on the government to also announce "sensational active travel policy".

"It would be good if these things were said at the same time, in my view," Boardman said. "When you're doing just this one thing it doesn't show that that's important here, so I'd like to see them rolled out at the same time to get balance. Everybody wants their kids to be safe, we need to make sure that that's been spoken to, and it's actually in there in the policy, but it hasn't been pushed up front."

Dan is the road.cc news editor and has spent the past four years writing stories and features, as well as (hopefully) keeping you entertained on the live blog. Having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for the Non-League Paper, Dan joined road.cc in 2020. Come the weekend you'll find him labouring up a hill, probably with a mouth full of jelly babies, or making a bonk-induced trip to a south of England petrol station... in search of more jelly babies.

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43 comments

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sheridan replied to Hirsute | 4 weeks ago
1 like

And not far from Kesgrave High School (the nationally-known school with a high percentage of cycling - or at least it was when I lived in the area decaces ago).  Luckily just outside Coffey's constituency, though I wonder what  effect Coffey's party-mate may have had on the area.

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stonojnr replied to sheridan | 4 weeks ago
0 likes

Dr Dan ? nothing, Main Road in Kesgrave is just as bad as anything Woodbridge chucks at you to cycle on, imo its actually worse, but people always cite the high school and think the problems must be solved.

which is probably why nothing changes and less than a few miles away the very thought of just putting a bollard and a few bits of cycle path to aid all those kids learning to cycle in Kesgrave actually to go somewhere other than the estate they live on ends up with being criticised so much.

for all Coffeys bluster, shes just reflecting the views of the people she has talked to in Woodbridge about it, you dont get 2000+ comments on these types of consultation normally, do you ?

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ktache replied to IanMK | 1 month ago
2 likes

She has a doctorate in crystallography...

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chrisonabike replied to bikeman01 | 1 month ago
1 like

I believe she was following the "Winston Churchill diet" - bubbly and cigars.  Although I'm not sure if Churchill favoured turnips?

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coachjoebeer replied to bikeman01 | 4 weeks ago
0 likes

Yes doesn't she just look at the height of health. What chance have the population got when a "unhealthy" is in charge. Get a bike, walk a bit more, lose weight and eat a far better quality of food. 

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Patrick9-32 | 1 month ago
18 likes

When will these people realise than in order for cycling and walking infrastructure to be truly successful it has to be anti-car because cars are anti cycling and walking, in order to promote one you have to supress the other. We have promoted cars over everything for 75 years, we need to spend some time balancing the scales. 
 

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don simon fbpe replied to Patrick9-32 | 1 month ago
5 likes

If we can encourage 30% of drivers to stop using the car that is a positive for everyone, 60% and drivers are on almost car free roads, peds and cyclists are in a safer environment. That is not anti-car. Language like that is simply to polarise and create division. Active travel can not be anti car as some people must use cars and may not be able to take advantage of active travel facilities.

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hawkinspeter replied to Patrick9-32 | 1 month ago
9 likes

Patrick9-32 wrote:

When will these people realise than in order for cycling and walking infrastructure to be truly successful it has to be anti-car because cars are anti cycling and walking, in order to promote one you have to supress the other. We have promoted cars over everything for 75 years, we need to spend some time balancing the scales. 

I was just about to post something similar, but you've hit the nail on the head there.

Tories - all about fake culture wars and never about facts.

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stonojnr replied to hawkinspeter | 4 weeks ago
0 likes

well keep in mind the county council leading and proposing these active travel changes is Tory.

so work that one out.

 

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john_smith replied to Patrick9-32 | 1 month ago
0 likes

Patrick9-32 wrote:

When will these people realise than in order for cycling and walking infrastructure to be truly successful it has to be anti-car because cars are anti cycling and walking, in order to promote one you have to supress the other. 

That's a very antagonistic way of looking at things. It is possible to promote several things at once. It's also possible to promote one thing that benefits several parties. You might not like cars, but that doesn't mean they are anti-you.

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chrisonabike replied to john_smith | 1 month ago
10 likes

john_smith wrote:

That's a very antagonistic way of looking at things. It is possible to promote several things at once. It's also possible to promote one thing that benefits several parties. You might not like cars, but that doesn't mean they are anti-you.

Well ... actually driving does tend to suppress other modes (particularly when promoted and provided for to the extent our various governments and councils have over time).

I would say the purveyors of motoring have on numerous occasions been knowingly anti-people (or at least people who aren't paying for their cars / fuel).  There was the jaywalking issue, the lead in petrol issue, the "demolishing your neighbourhood / green space to make way for roads" issue, the "flogging massive, more dangerous vehicles to work around tax" issue ...

Without serious efforts to avoid motor routes dividing places (for those who would walk / wheel / cycle), making places unpleasant to be in (noise, pollution, hard impermeable surfaces and parked cars everywhere) and creating a feedback loop whereby ameneties and workplaces come to require a car to access them ... yes - the benefits of driving come at significant detriment to other things.

I'd call it "rebalancing".  We can now see that some of the bright future promised us in the early days of mass motoring didn't appear - and there are indeed limits to the "good" we can get when everyone is driving.  There are also some significant issues.

We need to "tame the car".

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andystow replied to Patrick9-32 | 1 month ago
4 likes

"Anti-car": a single square metre of paved or even passable outdoor (or visible from outdoors) surface, anywhere, is not open for anyone to drive or park their car there.

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qwerty360 replied to andystow | 4 weeks ago
2 likes

andystow wrote:

"Anti-car": a single square metre of paved or even passable outdoor (or visible from outdoors) surface, anywhere, is not open for anyone to drive or park their car there.

 

Yep.

There is a practical limit to how much land can be allocated to transport. And of course, once you build properties etc it is almost impossible to increase land allocated to transport (knocking down buildings to make full road (inc pavements etc) wider isn't acceptable.

Generally most space is currently allocated to transport by motor vehicle. It is therefore all but impossible to allocate space to any other mode of transport without removing space from motor vehicles in urban areas...

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