The Corporate Carve-Up of Britain: 12 Actions to Fight Back Against Enterprise Zones
What You Can Do About UK Enterprise Zones
Labour’s Industrial Strategy Zones are accelerating the transformation of British democracy into corporate fiefdoms. Here’s what you need to know and what you can do about it.
Britain is being carved up. Not through dramatic privatisation announcements or controversial legislation, but through a quiet, systematic network of over 140 enterprise zones that operate outside normal democratic control, offer corporations tax breaks worth billions, and are now being consolidated and expanded under Labour’s Industrial Strategy.
These aren’t marginal experiments. They cover food production, universities, defence, AI development, data centres, and entire regional economies. They use public money to subsidise private profit while bypassing the democratic oversight that would normally apply to such spending.
The model is simple: designate an area as a “zone,” suspend normal planning rules and democratic accountability, offer corporations tax breaks and regulatory freedom, and lock in these advantages through 25-year contracts that outlast multiple governments.
Labour’s merger of Freeports and Investment Zones into Industrial Strategy Zones isn’t a technocratic reorganisation, it’s a rapid acceleration. More zones. More corporate power. Less democratic control.
But resistance is possible. These zones depend on public money, political protection, legal frameworks, and community acquiescence. All of these can be challenged.
Here are twelve concrete actions you can take:
1. DEMAND FULL TRANSPARENCY
Enterprise zones operate in the shadows, but they run on public money. That means you have a right to know exactly what’s happening.
What to demand:
- Which specific companies receive zone subsidies and how much
- What intellectual property these companies acquire through publicly-funded research
- What profits they extract from communities
- What taxes they avoid through zone exemptions
- What environmental damage they cause
- What wages they pay and what working conditions they offer
How to do it:
- Submit Freedom of Information requests to your local council and relevant government departments
- Ask your MP to table written parliamentary questions about zone finances
- Attend local council meetings and demand zone performance reports
- Contact local journalists and ask them to investigate zone operations in your area
- Use social media to share what you discover—transparency breeds accountability
The information exists. It’s being deliberately obscured. Force it into the open.
2. RESTORE DEMOCRATIC ACCOUNTABILITY
Enterprise zones are specifically designed to bypass normal democratic processes. Mayoral Development Orders can override local council planning decisions. “Regulatory sandboxes” suspend protections that would normally apply. Corporate governance boards make decisions that affect entire communities without any electoral mandate.
What democratic accountability looks like:
- All enterprise zones must require local council approval through normal democratic processes
- Genuine public consultation with real veto power, not rubber-stamp exercises
- Annual performance reviews accessible to the public
- Democratic revocation powers if zones fail to deliver promised benefits
- Community representation on all zone governance boards
- Public access to all zone decision-making meetings
How to fight for it:
- Challenge Mayoral Development Orders through local council opposition
- Demand your council refuse to cooperate with zones that bypass democratic process
- Organize community groups to attend and speak at planning consultations
- Document when “consultation” is cosmetic and publicize the democratic deficit
- Support councillors who resist zone expansion
Democracy isn’t a technicality to be streamlined away. It’s the mechanism through which communities protect themselves from exploitation.
3. ATTACH CONDITIONS TO ALL PUBLIC SUBSIDIES
Corporate welfare without conditions is simply wealth transfer from the public to shareholders. If zones receive public money, they must serve public interests.
Demand these conditions on all zone subsidies:
- Living wage guarantees: No public subsidy for poverty wages
- Union recognition: Workers must have collective bargaining rights
- Profit-sharing with local communities: If zones generate wealth, communities should benefit
- IP sharing requirements: Publicly-funded research shouldn’t generate private monopolies
- Environmental compliance: No regulatory exemptions that allow pollution
- Local hiring quotas: Zones should employ the communities they’re supposedly benefiting
- Supply chain transparency: Track whether benefits actually stay local
- Clawback provisions: If companies fail to deliver, subsidies must be repayable
How to push for conditionality:
- Make it an electoral issue—demand candidates commit to conditional subsidies only
- Support trade unions campaigning for zone worker rights
- Pressure local councils to attach conditions to any zone cooperation
- Highlight examples where unconditional subsidies led to corporate profit without community benefit
- Build coalitions between unions, environmental groups, and community organizations
Public money should serve public purposes. Make politicians defend why they’re giving corporations billions without strings attached.
4. BUILD PUBLIC ALTERNATIVES
The strongest challenge to corporate zones is proving that democratic alternatives deliver better outcomes.
What public alternatives look like:
- Community-owned food processing: Cooperatives that keep value in farming communities instead of extracting it to corporate headquarters
- Publicly-run research facilities: Universities and research centres that serve public knowledge creation rather than corporate IP acquisition
- Municipal data centres: Public digital infrastructure that protects privacy and serves community needs
- Cooperative enterprise zones: Economic development governed by workers and communities, not corporate boards
- Public renewable energy: Community-owned generation that keeps energy profits local
How to build them:
- Support existing cooperatives and community enterprises
- Campaign for local authority investment in public alternatives
- Connect with the cooperative movement and learn from successful models
- Demand that a portion of zone subsidies fund public alternatives for comparison
- Document and publicize when public models outperform corporate zones
The corporate model isn’t the only option. It’s just the only one being funded with billions in public money. Change that.
5. ORGANIZE COMMUNITY COALITIONS
Enterprise zones affect different groups in different ways, but those groups share common interests in democratic control and fair distribution of benefits.
Build coalitions between:
- Farmers losing local abattoirs and processing facilities to corporate consolidation
- Students and academics in commercialized universities where research serves corporate IP acquisition
- Zone workers facing low wages, insecure contracts, and union suppression
- Residents facing compulsory purchase orders to make way for zone development
- Environmental groups concerned about regulatory exemptions
- Small businesses unable to compete with subsidised corporate competitors
- Communities losing democratic control over local economic development
How to organise:
- Map who’s affected by zones in your area
- Host community meetings to share information and build connections
- Create communication networks (WhatsApp groups, email lists, social media)
- Coordinate campaigns that unite different affected groups
- Share resources, expertise, and organizing experience
- Build long-term relationships, not just single-issue campaigns
Isolation is the enemy of resistance. Corporate power depends on fragmenting opposition. Community organizing unites it.
6. UNIONIZE ENTERPRISE ZONE WORKERS
Workers in enterprise zones face particular exploitation: low wages justified by “competitiveness,” insecure contracts, minimal protections, and often active union suppression.
Why zone unionization matters:
- Collective bargaining is the most direct check on corporate exploitation
- Unions can demand the wage guarantees and conditions that zone governance boards won’t provide
- Organised workers can strike, the most powerful form of leverage
- Union presence makes zones accountable to workers, not just investors
- Successful zone unionisation creates models for other zones
How to support zone unionisation:
- If you work in a zone: contact relevant unions (Unite, GMB, Unison depending on sector)
- Share information about union rights with coworkers
- Document wage levels, working conditions, and safety issues
- Support union organizing campaigns in your area
- Pressure politicians to support union recognition in zones as condition of public subsidy
- Show solidarity with zone workers taking action
Labour organizing is the frontline of resistance. Everything else supports this.
7. LAUNCH LEGAL CHALLENGES
Enterprise zones operate through specific legal mechanisms: Mayoral Development Orders, compulsory purchase orders, 25-year licenses, regulatory exemptions. All of these can be challenged in court.
Legal vulnerabilities to exploit:
- Mayoral Development Orders that override local planning without proper justification
- Compulsory purchase orders that don’t meet genuine public interest tests
- 25-year licenses that lock in corporate advantages beyond any democratic mandate
- Regulatory sandboxes that suspend protections in ways that may violate human rights, environmental law, or labour law
- State aid rules (even post-Brexit, there are limits on anti-competitive subsidies)
- Environmental protections that can’t be legally waived
- Conflicts of interest on zone governance boards
How to pursue legal challenges:
- Contact public interest law firms and environmental law groups
- Crowdfund legal challenges through community fundraising
- Support existing legal challenges to zone mechanisms
- Document specific instances of legal overreach
- Connect with lawyers who’ve challenged similar structures elsewhere
- Use judicial review to force transparency and proper process
Legal challenges are expensive and time-consuming, but they work. They force corporations and governments to justify what they’re doing, and that justification is often impossible.
8. MAKE ZONES AN ELECTORAL ISSUE
Politicians respond to electoral pressure. If enterprise zones become a voting issue, they become a political liability.
Make candidates answer these questions:
- Will you vote to require democratic oversight for all enterprise zones?
- Will you support attaching conditions to zone subsidies?
- Will you commit to annual transparency reports on zone performance?
- Will you support community veto power over zone expansion?
- Will you investigate conflicts of interest on zone governance boards?
- Will you support revocation of zones that fail to deliver public benefits?
How to create electoral pressure:
- Organize hustings focused on enterprise zones
- Make zone accountability a litmus test for your vote
- Publicise which candidates support corporate zones vs. democratic accountability
- Use social media to spread candidate positions
- Coordinate with other affected communities to create regional/national pressure
- Support candidates who commit to zone reform
- Hold elected representatives accountable for their commitments
Elections are blunt instruments, but they’re powerful ones. Make zone accountability a condition of political support.
9. FORCE MEDIA COVERAGE
Over 140 enterprise zones affecting every aspect of national life, food, education, defence, AI, regional economies, and media coverage is minimal, buried in business sections, framed as technical policy rather than democratic crisis.
Why media matters:
- Public awareness is prerequisite for resistance
- Media coverage legitimizes concerns and attracts more attention
- Politicians respond to media pressure
- Investigative journalism can uncover information that FOIA requests miss
How to generate coverage:
- Contact local journalists with specific stories about zones in your area
- Write letters to editors connecting zones to issues people care about
- Use social media to spread information and tag journalists
- Create visual content (infographics, maps, videos) that makes the story accessible
- Connect your story to national narratives (cost of living, democratic deficit, regional inequality)
- Support independent media covering these issues
- Frame enterprise zones as the story behind the story (why is your region poor? why did that factory close? why are wages low? (zones)
Mainstream media won’t cover this without pressure. Apply that pressure systematically.
10. DEMAND PARLIAMENTARY SCRUTINY
Parliament is being bypassed, but MPs can still demand answers, force debates, and investigate what’s happening.
What MPs should be scrutinising:
- The governance structure of Industrial Strategy Zones
- The financial details of the Freeports/Investment Zones merger
- The expansion of Defence and AI Growth Zones
- Conflicts of interest on zone governance boards
- The use of public money for zone subsidies
- The environmental and labour standards being waived
- The 25-year timescales that outlast democratic cycles
- The total public cost of the zone network
How to pressure your MP:
- Write detailed letters citing specific concerns
- Request meetings (bring documentation and community representatives)
- Organise constituent groups to make this a priority issue
- Ask your MP to table parliamentary questions
- Ask your MP to request debates on enterprise zones
- Support MPs who are raising these issues
- Publicise when MPs refuse to engage with these concerns
MPs have tools most citizens don’t: parliamentary questions, debates, committee investigations, and media access. Force them to use those tools.
11. BUILD INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY
This isn’t just Britain. Special Economic Zones, Export Processing Zones, Free Trade Zones, corporate sovereignty mechanisms, they’re a global phenomena requiring global resistance.
What international solidarity looks like:
- Learning from communities fighting similar structures elsewhere
- Sharing organizing strategies and legal challenges that worked
- Understanding how global capital moves between jurisdictions
- Coordinating opposition to corporate models spreading globally
- Supporting workers and communities facing zones worldwide
How to connect internationally:
- Research zone resistance movements in other countries
- Connect with international trade union federations
- Participate in global justice networks focused on corporate power
- Share your experiences to help other communities
- Learn from successful resistance elsewhere (Indian SEZ opposition, Philippine Export Processing Zone organizing, etc.)
Corporate power is internationally coordinated. Resistance must be too.
12. REMEMBER: THESE ZONES ARE FRAGILE
The enterprise zone network looks formidable—billions in investment, cross-party support, 25-year contracts, physical infrastructure, legal protections. But it’s 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 won’t 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 isn’t about tweaking policy. It’s 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 it’s 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.
That’s not levelling up. That’s not growth. That’s not even capitalism as normally understood.
The window for resistance is closing. But it hasn’t closed.
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.
For more detailed analysis, see the full investigation at: https://substack.com/@europeanpowell/note/p-176626106*



If it's happening in the UK, you can be sure it'll be happening in some form or another in the rest of the western world. Thanks for this great advice.