Industry leaders urge construction to make the case for a better Brexit during forthcoming election campaign

Houses of Parliament

Construction leaders have urged the sector to seize its chance to make the case for a better Brexit during the forthcoming election campaign, after Theresa May fired the starting gun for a snap poll on 8 June.

The political parties’ competing visions for Brexit will dominate the debate over the next seven weeks, with issues crucial to the future health of the sector – including the levels of European immigration and access to the single market – up for grabs.

The Conservatives, who go into the campaign with a commanding lead in opinion polls, are likely to stick to their guns on a “hard Brexit”, with a probable end to free movement in and out of Europe and reduced access to the single market.

Meanwhile Labour and the Liberal Democrats plan to campaign for a softer Brexit and greater access to European markets.

In Scotland, the SNP is set to amplify its calls for a Scottish independence referendum in the hope of remaining in or rejoining the EU as an independent state.

Former building regulations minister Lord Stunell, a Liberal Democrat peer who supports ڶ’s Better Brexit campaign, said: “The election is a real opportunity in a non-partisan way to make the candidates understand that without a healthy and expanding construction industry, they cannot deliver the promises they will be making on houses, schools and infrastructure. Now more than ever we need to make a closely reasoned and argued case for construction’s interests not to be bypassed in the Brexit process.”

Richard Steer, chairman of consultant Gleeds Worldwide, said: “The core issues of training, labour shortage and client confidence will not be solved during a seven-week election campaign, but we want them to be front and centre of any new government’s policy platform once they are elected.”

Steer called on the wider industry to give its support to the ڶ a Better Brexit campaign ahead of the general election campaign.

The campaign - which calls for a fair deal for construction in Brexit negotiations - already has 125 backers, including major firms Aecom, Arcadis, Capita, Gleeds, KPMG, JLL, Mace, Ramboll, Taylor Wessing and McBains Cooper.

The manifesto sets out eight demands for the next government and three industry pledges for self-improvement. The demands cover areas of concern, including skills, material costs, pipelines and procurement.

Individual signatories include Mark Farmer, founding director of consultant Cast and author of the government-commissioned report on the sector Modernise or Die.

This week Farmer called on the political parties to set out a positive case to construction: “I hope to see […] manifestos that adequately reflect the importance of the construction industry’s welfare and future modernisation as part of its contribution to UK plc.”

 


Main parties’ likely pitches to construction

Conservatives

  • Commitment to HS2, Heathrow third runway and next generation nuclear plants
  • Build 500 new free schools by 2020
  • £2bn-funded Accelerated Construction Scheme to make public land with planning permission available to builders
  • £3bn (of previously announced money) for loans to chivvy along cash-strapped housing projects
  • Apprenticeship scheme to create three million places by 2020

Labour

  • Increase public borrowing to fund large-scale infrastructure projects
  • Build a million homes in first five years of coming to power, including 500,000 council homes, funded by a £500bn investment plan
  • End Right to Buy and re-introduce regional housebuilding targets
  • Introduce rent controls and longer tenancies; clamp down on errant private landlords
  • Remove local borrowing cap, allowing councils to borrow against housing stock; resulting building would see 12,000 new council houses built a year

Liberal Democrats

  • Build 300,000 new homes a year
  • Create a Housing Investment Bank to generate funds for new homes and a British Infrastructure Development Bank to fund “the infrastructure of the future”
  • Measures to protect tenants and tackle rogue landlords
  • Rapid transition to electric vehicles

SNP

  • Overall £20bn investment in infrastructure projects
  • £3bn affordable housing programme, building 50,000 units, with 35,000 for social rent
  • Extend Borders railway route, plus other rail and road improvements
  • Continue North Sea oil production, while overseeing decommissioning where necessary