I'm reading it now during my coffee break and it all sounds pretty radical and if they do it, then great.
BUT. What tools do they actually have?
They say they won't fund crap any more, but how much infra do they actually fund? I think most local crap is funded by housing developers, including our local council's own joint-venture companies. National government only funds cities, national parks and trunk roads, doesn't it?
It says except-cycles "should be the default on all quieter one-way streets" which is great, but who's going to pay the councils to change the legal orders and signs? No mention of that. Lazy car-crazy councils will just do nothing and plead poverty.
It says they will "enable effective enforcement of school streets outside London, by giving local authorities the powers" which is necessary but not sufficient. Again, the lazy car-crazy ones will simply not use the new powers.
12 mini-Holland schemes outside London and one zero-emission city. The lazy car-crazy just won't bid. I can already guess some of the likely city bidders: Bristol, Oxford and probably even fine-the-cyclists Peterborough.
"We will improve the [National Cycle] Network" but no mention of how and the defective bits are mostly on local council roads. The money in Theme 2 is all old money, I think, and while it claims to be "the largest sum ever committed", it's still dwarfed by the road-building budget, although there are the first moves to nibble the edge of that, or at least stop road-building being used to fark cycle routes.
Theme 3 is "empowering and encouraging local authorities" which is the same failed measure of the last three decades. We need something a bit stronger IMO so that even the lazy car-crazy stop farking cycling over. More regulate and direct than empower and encourage.
It also includes the worrying words "our main focus will be on medium-sized towns, larger towns and cities". So no change there then. Rural and semi-rural areas, where cycling should be an obvious choice for short trips between settlements and into towns, continue to be ignored by gov.uk
Theme 4, "enable ... protect" contains some interesting bits, including "consolidate existing ownership registers" which I think suggests finally getting fed up waiting for the likes of BikeRegister and Immobilise to end their peeing contest and cooperate properly. I'm a bit worried about "explore mandating retailers to number all bikes they sell on the new database" which seems rather intrusive.
I do love the Key design principles page and will be posting that in a few places. That could have come straight from a space4cycling campaigner. If only the trousers matched that mouth!