- Mon Jan 02, 2023 6:08 pm
#37257
I'm repeating here, but Corbyn's vision of Labour was as a party of protest. For his faults, Starmer has at least changed the party around into making Labour a party for governing.
The problem with the "free broadband" policy was that it was essentially the same as offering "free electricity" or any other free utility that isn't effectively a need compared to say healthcare. The variations of how such services are provided would have made this idea effectively impossible to implement, as no real detail was provided. The usual suspects claimed when this was announced that this would be a "gamechanger" when everyone else rolled their eyes.
Now, they could have went two ways elsewhere on this that might have been viable. One would have been to nationalise Openreach & KCOM's physical infrastructure (where the latter exists in Hull), which could have proved popular but would have saddled the government with heavy buyout costs not to mention issues with BT's pension hole which would have likely been an agreed part of any buyout - but there would have been significant opposition to this by other nets like Virgin Media as well as the alt-nets. As it is it looks like Openreach (now effectively run as much of an arms reach away from BT without being totally split off from BT) are technically progressing okay-ish at present into becoming an exclusive IP network in the future, there's little pressing need to bring them into public ownership at present other than to say "we now own it!"
A second idea would have been to have drafted a law to compel Openreach & any ISP above a certain percentage of a national market share, as well as the four main mobile operators, to offer a basic broadband package at a set fee that either was non-profit or had a capped profit margin made available to all. While some "social tariffs" exist, having a basic provision open to all would have been more favourable IMO especially to those whom could afford a broadband package but see it as something that's too expensive for the use they get out of it. In terms of detail, I'd suggest that the details would be subject to Ofcom regulation to be revisited as needed.
"Grey will never go out of fashion, because it's never been in fashion!"