REMEMBER: FREE ZONES ARE FRAGILE
The enterprise zone network looks formidable, billions in investment, cross-party support, 25-year contracts, physical infrastructure, legal protections. But itโs built on foundations that can be challenged.
Zones depend on:
Public money (which can be withdrawn): Every zone subsidy is a political choice. Governments can choose differently.
Public legitimacy (which can be challenged): Once people understand what zones are, support evaporates. The model survives through obscurity.
Political protection (which can be voted out): Politicians enable zones. Different politicians can disable them.
Legal frameworks (which can be contested): The legal structures enabling zones are challengeable in courts.
Community acquiescence (which can be transformed into resistance): Zones assume communities wonโt organize. Prove them wrong.
The fragility is real. A single successful legal challenge can undermine an entire zone model. A single high-profile exposure can shift public opinion. A single election fought on zone accountability can change the political calculus. A single community successfully resisting can inspire dozens more.
The Stakes
This isnโt about tweaking policy. Itโs about whether Britain will be a democracy or a corporate archipelago, whether public money serves public purposes or private profit, whether communities control their own development or are developed by distant corporations, whether workers have rights or are simply inputs to be optimized. The enterprise zone network is systematic, comprehensive, and intentional. But itโs not inevitable.
Expose them. Challenge them. Organize against them.
The alternative is a Britain where everything exists primarily to generate corporate profit, where democracy is theatre, where regions compete to offer the lowest wages and weakest protections, where public institutions serve private interests, and where resistance is structurally impossible because corporate power is embedded in physical infrastructure with 25-year contracts.
Thatโs not levelling up. Thatโs not growth. Thatโs not even capitalism as normally understood.
The window for resistance is closing. But it hasnโt closed yet.
Start with one action. Then another. Connect with others doing the same. Build from there.
Because the only thing more powerful than billions in corporate subsidy is organized communities that refuse to be bought.
The Corporate Carve-Up of Britain: 12 Actions to Fight Back Against Enterprise Zones
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