For other people with the same name, see Nigel Harris.
Nigel Harris (born March 1957) is an English journalist and media commentator. He was managing editor of RAIL, a UK rail industry magazine and is now Co-Presenter of the Green Signals podcast[1] with Richard Bowker.[2] He has been in the railway publishing industry since 1981 where he started as assistant editor of the publication Steam World.[3] He is often invited to speak on British television about accidents and other rail related matters.[4][5] He is regularly called before the Transport Select Committee of the UK Parliament to give evidence and opinion.[6][7] In November 2024 had had a Class 66 locomotive named after him.[8]
Harris was born in March 1957[9] in Burnley, Lancashire and educated at Burnley Grammar School. He then attended and graduated from the University of Wales, Lampeter, in 1978 with Honours in History. He started his career in journalism at The Westmorland Gazette in 1979 as a trainee reporter. In 1981 he started as assistant editor of the publication Steam World. He has also edited Steam Railway and Trains Illustrated.[10] He co-founded and managed a book publishing company, Silver Link, from 1984 to 1990 which has since been acquired.[11][12]
Harris was appointed editor of Rail in 1995.[13] The magazine is currently produced every two weeks by Bauer Consumer Media. Since 1995 he has written extensively about the privatisation of British Rail and the impact of the privatisation of British Rail.[14] He has written opinion and analysis for The Times, and provided specialist rail industry comment for, among others, the BBC's Today programme. He has also specialist books on railways and shipping to his credit.[15][16][17] One major project has been editing and researching for A New Illustrated History of Her Majesty's Railway Inspectorate, by Ian Prosser and David Keay.[18]
Harris has provided expert evidence to the Transport Select Committee of the UK Parliament.[6] He was the principal witness at a televised select committee meeting on 26 May 2021 discussing the Williams-Shapps White Paper on Great British Railways formation.[7] He has also given evidence to the Rail Accident Investigation Branch. He is a regular conference speaker, panelist and chair.
Rail moved into the business events sector, launching the National Rail Awards, with categories including station of the year.[19] Harris has planned and presented NRA presentation ceremonies at Grosvenor House in London's Park Lane. Later events have included the National Rail Conference, the RAIL 100 Breakfast Clubs,[20] and the National Rail Recovery conference (February 2021).[21] Speakers at the latter included Huw Merriman (chair of the Transport Select Committee), Jim McMahon (Shadow Transport Secretary) and Lord Peter Hendy CBE (chairman of Network Rail).[22][23] The 2021 Awards were again held at Grosvenor House on 16 September 2021.[24]
Harris is also a television programme-maker having produced, scripted and presented programming for this rail industry market.[25] His description of British Rail Class 46 locomotive number 46009 being destructively smashed into a nuclear flask to demonstrate safety was shown on national television.[26][27][28]
He often writes about HS2, and was described by the Yorkshire Post as a "top rail expert".[2] When the Integrated Rail Plan for the North and Midlands was published in November 2021, he called it an act of political spinelessness, saying it created a new east-west divide in the country.[41][42] He further accused the government of selling the public total lies.[43] He had previously warned that the whole purpose of HS2 is destroyed if the eastern leg was scrapped.[2] He called it hugely damaging for the public, echoing the Newcastle Member of ParliamentCatherine McKinnell,[44] and raised concern about the blight on people's lives with the cancellation.[45] When interviewed by The Independent he said the Leeds station upgrade being called part of the IRP by the government was not spin but dishonesty.[46]
Harris also works in a volunteer role for Great Central Railway Development Ltd, a company aiming to reinstate part of the old Great Central Railway, though he resigned as an officer in October 2019.[9]