Skip advert
Advertisement

UK motorists are overtaxed, says Tory MP Greg Smith

Car fan Greg Smith MP sticks up for UK drivers in an exclusive chat with Auto Express

“The motorist is the most overtaxed creature in the country.” They weren’t the words we were expecting to come from the mouth of a sitting Conservative MP, but Greg Smith isn’t afraid of putting across an honest view, even if it’s in stark contrast to that of the current Tory Government.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Self-confessed car fan Smith, who also sits on the Transport Select Committee, has taken to the roads around his 335-square mile Buckingham constituency in a classic Land Rover Defender, holding surgeries from the back seats of the off-roader that’s being powered by P1 sustainable fuels.

We met up with Smith in the market town of Princes Risborough, where he gave us his views on everything from potholes to EV charging, and also talked about his love of Formula One – handy as his constituency covers part of the Silverstone circuit.

We started by asking him if he felt drivers had a right to feel persecuted these days? 

“I think there has been a big movement that has an undertone of anti-car about it in recent years,” he says. “And you can divide that into multiple columns. 

“There’s a column of people that just don’t like private transport. They would rather everyone got on a bike or a train or a bus, or whatever it might be. I’m certainly not anywhere near that column. I’m an opponent of that mindset. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

“Then you’ve got the columns of people who for good reasons want to do something about the pollutants in the atmosphere – they have taken a stance on vehicles. But I think it’s a false stance. The Ultra Low Emissions Zone in London is a prime example of this, but it’s happening elsewhere in the country. That to me is just false because cars, through technology, are getting cleaner and cleaner.”

Advertisement - Article continues below

When it comes to electric cars, Smith feels that the Government’s current proposal to outlaw the sale of internal combustion-engined cars in 2030 needs to be reviewed. “I think 2030 needs pushing back,” he said. “I think we need to have a sensible debate about what actually is a net-zero or carbon-neutral, de-fossilised vehicle. The Government’s zero-emission mandate talks about the tailpipe, so that’s immediately writing synthetic fuels off.”

Smith has a passion for synthetic fuels, as is evidenced by the Land Rover he’s using for his ‘Landy Tour’. But he also thinks the push to EVs should be given more time. “I’m much more in favour of letting the technology develop. And there’s no doubt that there is a future in battery electric cars across the world. But is it the answer for everything? My contention on that is no.”

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

The other issue, of course, is charging, and Smith has a firm view that the push for more chargers is putting the chicken before the egg. “We’re way behind” on infrastructure, he continued. “I think there’s a couple of things, and the Transport Select Committee has looked at this both within our recent EV inquiry and now the Fuelling The Future inquiry. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

One of the big challenges we’ve got is grid capacity. Everyone’s rushing to put in the chargers without realising you actually need to supply them.

“We are putting ourselves into this doom loop if we can’t actually power the network. Everyone’s focused on how many public chargers we’ve got in Buckinghamshire – in Princes Risborough, Buckingham, Aylesbury – but the energy issue has to come first. And until we reform the grid to an extent where we can actually get the renewables that everyone’s putting up into the grid, it’s not going to work, is it? Which again is another reason why 2030 needs to be pushed back. We need wholesale grid reform.”

On funding for pothole repairs, Smith said: “It is about money, but it’s also about changing working practices and the way you fix the roads.” His local council has bought a JCB Pothole Pro machine, which is transforming the speed of repairs.

Our roads may need sprucing up, but according to Smith the UK is still a brilliant place to build cars. “We are a great nation of engineers, of car makers, of designers, of aerodynamicists. There is a reason that the pinnacle of motorsports is here, and that everything else feeds from that downwards.

“We’ve got great car manufacturing in this country  – we’ve got to find a way of keeping them here. We’ve got to find a way of delivering things, like extending the R&D tax credits, so that they’re developing the tech that is going to make the difference for the next generation and bring even more companies into the UK.”

Do you think that UK motorists are overtaxed? Let us know in the comments section below...

Skip advert
Advertisement

Steve Fowler has previously edited Auto Express, Carbuyer, DrivingElectric, What Car?, Autocar and What Hi-Fi? and has been writing about cars for the best part of 30 years. 

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

UK gets 1,000 new electric car chargers with multi-million pound investment
RAW Charging points with an Audi

UK gets 1,000 new electric car chargers with multi-million pound investment

Plans to install 1,000 chargers over 28 retail sites is being billed as “major step forward” for EV charging infrastructure
News
16 Mar 2026
The death of the Honda 0 Series is heartbreaking, but what it signals is even worse
Jordan Honda opinion

The death of the Honda 0 Series is heartbreaking, but what it signals is even worse

One of the most exciting new car projects in the last 50 years is dead, but it wasn’t really Honda that killed it…
Opinion
16 Mar 2026
Rejected! Government says no to calls for early review of EV sales targets
Electric car charging mega test - charging overhead

Rejected! Government says no to calls for early review of EV sales targets

Car makers say the UK’s EV targets were too ambitious but the government will not bring forward its review
News
12 Mar 2026
What are the Euro 7 emissions standards?
Diesel exhaust smoke

What are the Euro 7 emissions standards?

Euro 7 is big news for the car industry and is more relevant for drivers than you might think…
Tips & advice
25 Feb 2026

Most Popular

New speed cameras without flash or road markings arrive to catch more motorists
Speeding camera

New speed cameras without flash or road markings arrive to catch more motorists

The new type of radar-based speed cameras are currently being trialled in London
News
19 Mar 2026
Stansted Airport blames new £28 drop-off fee for drivers on ‘sustainability’
airport parking

Stansted Airport blames new £28 drop-off fee for drivers on ‘sustainability’

The price of a 15-minute drop off now costs £10, while a 30-minute stop incurs a £28 charge
News
20 Mar 2026
10 coolest SUVs coming soon: new models aim to take the 4x4 market by storm
Coolest SUVs coming soon - March 2026 header image

10 coolest SUVs coming soon: new models aim to take the 4x4 market by storm

These are fresh SUVs we can’t wait to arrive, from Skoda’s butch baby electric SUV to McLaren’s loftiest creation ever
Best cars & vans
20 Mar 2026

Find a car with the experts