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Highway Code: Alliance of British Drivers claims changes have “created a false sense of winners and losers”

The revisions, introduced in January, have given cyclists “the impression that provocative, obstructive and challenging behaviour has merit”, says the organisation’s director Duncan White

A director of the Alliance of British Drivers, a not-for-profit pro-motoring lobbying group, has claimed that the recent revisions to the Highway Code lack balance and have “entirely failed in creating a sense of shared responsibility for the safety of all road users”.

In an interview with GB News, Duncan White claims that the changes, which were introduced in January to protect vulnerable road users, have resulted in “very provocative behaviour” and even “deliberate” acts of obstruction by cyclists. 

> "Lunatic Highway Code" encourages road rage and gives cyclists carte blanche, Fair Fuel UK boss claims 

“The Alliance of British Drivers has always maintained that the safety of all road users is the paramount consideration; we are however concerned that the latest edition of the Highway Code has not created a balanced appreciation of the realities of road use,” White told the news channel.

“Our recent dialogue with Baroness Vere at the Department of Transport has reinforced our view that the latest version of the Highway Code is open to a broad range of interpretations and assumptions which has not contributed to a clarity of understanding of the revised ‘rules of the road’.

“The Alliance of British Drivers campaigns tirelessly for the safety of our roads. It is a matter of much regret that instead of bringing all road users together in the cause of safety, the revised Highway Code has introduced an unhelpful atmosphere of divisiveness that has created a false sense of ‘winners and losers’ rather than promoting mutual responsibility in how we all use our roads. This is not in anyone’s interest.

> Editorial in The Times – which in 2012 urged ‘Save Our Cyclists’ – calls for dangerous cycling law and riders to be licensed and insured 

White claimed that the new ‘hierarchy of road users’ contained in the revisions, which advises that the road users who can inflict the most harm should bear the most responsibility for safety on the roads, is “very prescriptive” and “provoked strong reactions in some quarters”.

He continued: “Sensible road users have always appreciated that the larger the vehicle, the potential for greater damage and the vast majority act in a responsible way in appreciating this very obvious situation.

“Since the publication of the revised Highway Code we have seen a change in attitudes and this has led to some very provocative behaviour on our roads which have, on occasions, been interpreted by some as a deliberate act of obstruction.

“This has not improved etiquette nor does it reflect the absolute requirement for individual responsibility to keep our roads as safe as possible for all users.”

> “The day cyclists took over the roads”: The Times, Darren Grimes and TikTok react as new Highway Code revisions come into force this weekend 

In a thinly veiled allusion to cyclists, White said: “If one sector of road users are given the impression that provocative, obstructive and challenging behaviour has merit then the revised Highway Code has entirely failed in creating a sense of shared responsibility for the safety of all road users.

“For Ministers of the Crown to deny such shifts in attitude despite written and visual evidence then we have an institutional failure to appreciate the negative impact of unwarranted changes in the Highway Code.

“When certain sectors of road users publicly state that they had a disproportionate impact on re-drafting our collective ‘rules of the road’ to their specific advantage and yet this is denied by Ministers despite the evidence, then we clearly have developed a very lop-sided understanding of equitable policies for the safety of all.”

> Press misrepresents Highway Code changes – just days before they come into force 

White’s comments echo the spate of impassioned and often misleading anti-cycling articles that followed the introduction of the Highway Code revisions in January.

In the Sun, Fair Fuel UK’s founder Howard Cox called the “lunatic” changes a “cyclists’ charter to ride any way they wish”. Cox claimed the revisions would encourage road rage and gave cyclists the “legal right to pass ALL the blame in any traffic incident on to other road users.” He also accused the “anti-driver Government” of “deliberately fuelling division between cyclists and motorists”.

Florida resident Richard Littlejohn penned an “error-strewn” column in the Daily Mail attacking cycling in Britain, while the Telegraph published an opinion piece which argued that “pedal-pushers have taken over British roads". 

White’s interview isn’t the first time that GB News has covered the Highway Code revisions.

In January one of the channel’s presenters, conservative commentator Darren Grimes, called for the changes to be scrapped, falsely stated that car drivers were at the bottom of the new hierarchy, and claimed that in London “you’re lucky if you get away with your life with cyclists storming down the road so fast” (despite cyclists being involved in four of the 346 incidents which resulted in the death of a pedestrian in 2020). 

Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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40 comments

Avatar
brooksby replied to ktache | 2 years ago
7 likes

Astroturf = Fake grassroots 

Avatar
Ride On replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
4 likes
brooksby wrote:

Astroturf = Fake grassroots 

Thanks I was struggling with that

Avatar
ktache replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
5 likes

I had been aware of the concept with some drugfirms setting up campaign groups to take advantage of very ill people and their caring relatives but I hadn't heard it defined in such a wonderful and concise manner.

I thank you for making me aware of it. I did have to look it up too.

Avatar
chrisonabike | 2 years ago
6 likes

Quote:

The revisions ... have given cyclists “the impression that provocative, obstructive and challenging behaviour has merit”

They're absolutely right - only they missed "some naive" before "cyclists".  Bolshy types gonna provoke just because and the rest know that having some success in a single battle doesn't mean the war is over (to borrow some of the overexcited rhetoric).

"provocative, obstructive and challenging behaviour" very often wins.  It's only a shock when those making it work for them aren't the majority or those with wealth, priveledge or overwhelming superiority.

Avatar
brooksby | 2 years ago
9 likes

Quote:

The revisions ... have given cyclists “the impression that provocative, obstructive and challenging behaviour has merit”

...says the chair of the ABD???  Who are of course so well known for their diplomatic attitude toward sharing the roads between different classes of road users...  

Avatar
Clem Fandango | 2 years ago
11 likes

On GB News you say?

Must be true then...

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Surreyrider replied to Clem Fandango | 2 years ago
1 like

I think they have as many viewers as this alliance has members - luckily. 

Avatar
hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
13 likes

Quote:

In an interview with GB News...

I think I've read enough to see where that's heading.

Avatar
nosferatu1001 replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
3 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

Quote:

In an interview with GB News...

I think I've read enough to see where that's heading.

its like starting "in the daily Hate Mail..."...

Avatar
AlsoSomniloquism replied to nosferatu1001 | 2 years ago
0 likes

"On TalkTV" will soon be similar from the small section of Piers Morgan used to advertise it. 

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