in the old livery During December 2003, the
Strategic Rail Authority announced that
Danish State Railways/
Stagecoach,
FirstGroup,
Govia and
MTR/
Sea Containers had been shortlisted to bid for the new Integrated Kent franchise, which would replace the South Eastern franchise and include services on
High Speed 1 operating from
St Pancras. In November 2005, the
Department for Transport (DfT) announced Govia had been awarded the franchise; the services operated by
South Eastern Trains were transferred to Southeastern on 1 April 2006. During November 2007, the
second phase of
High Speed 1 was opened to traffic, resulting in the freeing up of train paths on the traditional network previously used by
Eurostar, which permitted Southeastern to increase certain services two months later. During December 2008, as part of the franchise agreement, responsibility for the
Redhill to Tonbridge Line was transferred to
Southern. On 14 December 2009, Southeastern launched full operations of its high-speed services using its newly procured fleet of
British Rail Class 395 high speed trains. Seven million journeys were recorded on in the first year of this service's operation. The introduction of Southeastern's high-speed services was typically regarded as successful, achieving good reliability and passenger satisfaction figures, as well as being credited for an increase in passenger numbers above that already being experienced on the Kent network. The initial terms of the franchise had included a period of eight years, along with a two-year option dependent on performance targets being met. During March 2011, having fulfilled these performance criteria, it was announced that the DfT had granted Govia a two-year franchise extension until March 2014. During March 2009, the bay platforms at
London Blackfriars were temporarily closed for reconstruction as part of the
Thameslink Programme; accordingly, Southeastern services that previously terminated at Blackfriars, mostly from via the
Catford loop, were extended to Kentish Town, St Albans, Luton or Bedford. When the station fully reopened with new bay platforms in May 2012, these services continued to run, but in the evening and on weekends (when the station had been closed), instead of terminating at Victoria, services terminated at Blackfriars. Following the DfT review after the
cancellation of the InterCity West Coast franchise process in 2012, extensions were granted to the franchises due for renewal in the near future. In 2013, the coalition government opted to extend Southeastern's franchise without competitive tender from March 2014 to June 2018, and in 2016 further extended it until December 2018. The Invitation to Tender was to be released in September 2017 for contract award in August 2018. Amidst the
2016–18 United Kingdom rail strikes that impacted numerous train operators across the nation, Southeastern cleaning staff, outsourced to
employment agency Wettons, voted to stage
industrial action in a dispute over pay and working conditions in September 2017. A strike, which involved Wettons cleaning staff affiliated with the
National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT), took place on 19 October 2017 and lasted for 24 hours. There was no further industrial action, although negotiations between the RMT, Southeastern and Wettons continued for some time. As part of the 2018
Thameslink Programme, several of the routes formerly operated by Southeastern changed into Thameslink routes, including services to and . These services using the
Class 700 now run from through the London Core via and on to the
Kent Main Line or the
North Kent Line.
Development of future franchise During January 2016,
Transport for London (TfL) announced its intention to take over the London suburban parts of the franchise from 2018, integrating the routes into a proposed metro network. However, in December 2016, Transport Secretary
Chris Grayling rejected this proposed reorganisation; the decision was quickly condemned by
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan. In June 2017, the DfT announced that four parties, comprising an
Abellio/
East Japan Railway Company/
Mitsui consortium, incumbent
Govia,
Stagecoach and
Trenitalia, had been shortlisted to bid for the next South Eastern franchise. On 10 August 2017, Trenitalia withdrew its interest in the franchise. During November 2017, the Invitation to Tender for the next franchise was issued. During February 2018,
Alstom joined Stagecoach's bid. The bid evaluation process was protracted, contributing to short term extensions of the franchise to the incumbent operator. The franchise competition was cancelled on 7 August 2019 and the DfT instead took up a further extension and the operator was to run services until 31 March 2020. However, a new contract was then agreed on 30 March 2020, running up to 16 October 2021, with a possible extension to 31 March 2022.
Termination of franchise During September 2021, the DfT announced it would be terminating Govia's South Eastern franchise after revenue declaration discrepancies involving £25million of public money were discovered. Secretary of State for Transport
Grant Shapps stated that this was a serious breach of the "good faith" obligation in the franchise agreement. Following the announcement, shares in
Go-Ahead Group (joint owner of Govia) fell 22% and their Chief Financial Officer resigned. In February 2022, Go-Ahead announced the outcome of investigations into the termination of the franchise; it found that "serious errors had been made” since 2006, with the expected cost to the company to be over £80million. The amount owed to the DfT was increased to £51.3million, with errors dating back to the start of the franchise in 2006. Go-Ahead also stated that they may also owe DfT an additional £21.3million, related to a dispute over profit sharing. On 17 October 2021, government-owned
Southeastern (SE Trains Limited) took over the franchise as an
operator of last resort. == Southeastern sub-brands ==