Does Liverpool really need a half hourly service, or is it just a case of regional pride because a certain city thirty miles down the road has more trains?
You should've just stopped on the comma. Does Manchester need thrice-hourly services, or is it some political 'second city' building project to the detriment of other cities in the north? See, you can add hyperbole on anything.
Like I've said before, people on here generally think Liverpool's a lot smaller and less important than it actually is (as neilmc innocently shows and I'll address him shortly). People also think Manchester's a lot bigger and more important than it actually is. So, Manchester getting three times the service to London is not seen as an anomoly, whereas I find it odd and difficult to believe such a difference in service is justified purely due to demand. Therefore, what I've been looking to seek out on here is whether Liverpool is under-served, Manchester over-served, or a bit of both. There appears to be no consensus, although there does seem to be a higher tilt towards Manchester being over-served for political reasons- though a few suggest Liverpool might be a little underserved too.
Note, I didn't start this thread and I'm by far not the only one who sees this as an anomoly. Indeed, even Network Rail identified it as a 'gap' in one of its research publications.
This highlights the problem for Liverpool which is one of geography and economics - it is an excellent base for flights to Belfast and Dublin and that's about it, it's an excellent base for trains to hardly anywhere.
The old 'Liverpool is far away and isolated' chesnut. No it isn't. Well, at least no geographically. If it is, then New York is also isolated. Liverpool's road links are decent enough and the rail infrastructure is too; it's just the services the statist Department or Transport decide should be run on them. And just how isn't Liverpool not a convenient place to fly into from anywhere other than the east of Ireland? That makes no sense to me at all.
Liverpool's isolation is political, not geographical.
Whilst Manchester and Liverpool as cities are almost comparable in size and population (Manchester is only ninth largest city in population terms!), Greater Manchester contains ten boroughs whilst Merseyside has only five and thus its metropolitan area is actually much larger; of those ten, Wigan has a WCML station which will be a base for passengers in Wigan and possibly the western parts of Bolton but I guess will also be an attractive railhead for much of Knowsley and Sefton. In addition, London trains call at Stockport, a very busy and easy pick-up and drop-off point with the M60 going through the middle of the town, plus either Wilmslow or Macclesfield both of which are affluent towns with good commuter potential.
Manchester, in real terms, is the fourth largest city in the UK, after London, Birmingham and Glasgow (I consider Manchester to be Manchester City Council area, Salford, Trafford and perhaps a few ajoining areas of other boroughs). Liverpool is fifth. You can't use the size of Greater Manchester and Merseyside to compare the two cities. Greater Manchester covers places as far away and unmancunian as Wigan, whilst Merseyside doesn't cover much closer places like Widnes, Runcorn, Ellesmere Port, Skelmersdale or Ormskirk. Yes, the wider Manchester areaa has more sizeable towns such as Bolton, Bury etc (I've never disputed that), but the Liverpool area is not that small. The way some of you talk, you think the Wirral is a suburb of Chester, whilst anywhere north of, and possibly even including, Kirkby is Ribble Valley land.
In terms of regional comparisons, Manchester and Birmingham compete to be England's second city with Leeds arguably going for fourth spot, whilst Liverpool is nowhere near in any comparison - if Manchester didn't exist it would have a greater importance in the same way as Bradford would be important if Leeds didn't exist and Wolverhampton would be the West Midlands hotspot if Birmingham didn't exist. But they do.
And what's the definition of 'England's second city'? As far as I know, it was always an informal thing given to Birmingham due to it being comfortably the second largest city in Britain (there's more of a gap between Birmingham and Manchester than between Manchester and Liverpool when it comes to size). Also, Birmingham was closer to London - the centre of the universe, so far as the establisment are concerned. If you're comparing effectively state-planted industry, such as an overly large airport, or overly large media sector, than it's Manchester by some way.
Liverpool is
not comparable to Wolverhampton. Wolverhampton is a small city on the outer limits of a much larger city, Birmingham. It's totally inaccurate and insulting if you think Liverpool is the same, in its relationship with Manchester. Bradford and Leeds is less ridiculous but still totally wrong. Those two cities are much closer to each other than Liverpool and Manchester are. They are effectively the same conurbation in a way Liverpool and Manchester are not. That said, if they moved all the trains away from Leeds to Bradford and planted all the state institutions, such as the BBC and the regional civil service, then we'd soon see how amazing Leeds was compared to the other big Yorkshire cities. Same with all the other 'regional capitals'.