17/11/2025
🚖 “Uber, Bolt & Veezu Announce Their Love for Rules — After Years of Pretending They Didn’t Need Any!”
According to TaxiPoint - UK Taxi News, DM New, and written evidence submitted to the UK Parliament’s Transport Committee, the ride-hailing giants Uber, Bolt and Veezu have unexpectedly discovered a passion for national regulation.
A passion so strong, in fact, that they are now proposing a single set of licensing standards for the entire country. 💼📘
This sudden policy enlightenment comes after years of thriving precisely because regulations differed from town to town. Irony level: chef’s kiss. 😇
🧭 1. Cross-Border Licensing: The Magical Mystery Tour
According to TaxiPoint’s coverage of evidence presented to the Committee, Uber, Bolt and Veezu emphasised the “importance” of maintaining cross-border hiring — the system allowing a driver licensed in Town A to spend most of their working hours in Town B… or C… or whichever alphabet they fancy that day.
Veezu, conforming to its submission reported by DM News, warned that banning cross-border work could reduce services and even undermine safety.
Bolt, according to TaxiPoint, argued that passengers “simply don’t care about administrative boundaries”.
Meanwhile, several councils — Wolverhampton prominently among them — acknowledged that the current situation creates, as they diplomatically put it, “inconsistencies in public confidence and enforcement”.
Because who doesn’t enjoy a regulatory system that functions like a scavenger hunt? 🧩🚗
📏 2. National Minimum Standards: When Everyone Suddenly Likes Consistency
As reported by TaxiPoint and conforming to multiple parliamentary submissions, the big operators now claim that national minimum standards are the future.
These would standardise:
👉background checks
👉 safety rules
👉 driver vetting
👉 vehicle standards
👉 complaint handling
👉 licensing fees
According to parliamentary evidence, councils also largely support this — especially as it might finally end “licence shopping”, the unofficial national sport of the PHV industry.
Unions too, according to the same submissions, say national rules would stop “regulatory tourism”, where problem drivers simply relocate to the next lenient district like nomadic risk-takers. 🎪
👮 3. Enforcement: The Great Who-Actually-Polices-Anything Puzzle
Conforming to testimony presented before the Transport Committee, the current enforcement structure is, in polite parliamentary language, “not fully effective”. In normal language: nobody knows who is responsible half the time.
Operators requested national enforcement powers, according to TaxiPoint’s reporting — meaning an officer in one part of the country could discipline drivers licensed elsewhere.
Sounds simple. Which is exactly why it won’t be. 😅
🔒 4. Passenger Safety & Complaints: Who You Gonna Call?
As referenced in the Committee Chair’s public statement, the existing patchwork of safety standards “creates risks for vulnerable people”.
This is why parliamentary evidence repeatedly called for:
👉 a national database for revoked or refused licences
👉 standard complaint structures
👉 improved data sharing
👉 preparation for autonomous vehicles (because even robot taxis will need rules)
According to TaxiPoint’s analysis, this reform could finally stop banned drivers from reappearing in the next city like a bad sequel. 🎬
📝 Editorial Commentary
It is both heartwarming and mildly comedic to watch multinational corporations, councils, and trade unions suddenly join hands in reforming a system they have collectively sidestepped for years. 🥲
Uber, Bolt and Veezu now present themselves — according to their own submissions — as champions of public safety.
Councils present themselves as champions of consistency.
Unions present themselves as champions of fairness.
And the public? They’d just like a taxi that turns up, doesn’t get lost, and doesn’t require a geography degree to understand its licence. 😅
🎤 YOUR TURN
What do you think of these proposed national rules?
Is this genuine reform — or a clever way to streamline the market for the biggest players?
💬 Share your opinion below.
If Parliament is discussing it, the public should be deciding it.
©️ 2025. All rights reserved to Private Hire Drivers/Vehicles News 17.11.2025