THE Mayor of West Yorkshire said “you can’t make it up” after the train she was taking to a meeting to discuss rail chaos was cancelled.

On Wednesday, Tracy Brabin was one of several Northern leaders who had arranged to meet with Transport Secretary Mark Harper.

The message they wanted to send was that “levelling up” at a bare minimum means ensuring that Northerners can get to work and education opportunities.

But the day started out on the wrong foot for the West Yorkshire Mayor after her train from Leeds to Manchester was cancelled.

She Tweeted about her travel woes, saying: “You can’t make it up. My train from Leeds to Manchester to meet Mark Harper was cancelled.

“The platform was packed as we all wait for the next.

This misery can’t go on.”

She included a photo of a packed platform at Leeds Station.

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Ms Brabin eventually made it to the meeting, which was also being attended by Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham, Liverpool City Region Mayor Steve Rotheram, South Yorkshire Mayor Oliver Coppard and The North of Tyne Mayor Jamie Driscoll.

After the meeting the mayors released a joint statement saying: “The absolute bare minimum of levelling up means being able to get to work and college on time – but Northerners have been robbed of this basic right because of the chaos on our railways. That must end.

“This was a positive meeting and we welcome the new Transport Secretary saying he will grip this crisis, which is causing misery for millions and damaging our regional economies.

“But the time for warm words is over. We’ve had enough of broken promises – passengers are rightly demanding action now.

“We made it clear to Mark Harper that he can and must step in and clean up this mess, which was made worse by his predecessors.

“If thousands of trains were being cancelled in London and the South East, we know this would be dealt with as an emergency – and we expect that same level of urgency.

“That means putting operators – such as Avanti, Transpennine Express and Northern – on notice to improve. The government mustn’t reward these appalling levels of service by signing-off on contract extensions when they come up for renewal.

“We need the Department for Transport to set out a clear timetable for reform, with ambitious targets that would bring service in the North in line with the performance enjoyed in the South.

“We have a new timetable coming in on December 11 so our challenge to the Transport Secretary is clear: he must get the network running properly, deliver the full timetable, and ensure the disastrous scenes we’ve witnessed over the summer and autumn aren’t repeated.

“We will hold him to account on that for the nine million people across the North that we serve.”