Social Housing

Part of the debate – in the House of Commons at 3:10 pm on 13 June 2019.

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Photo of Matt Western Matt Western Labour, Warwick and Leamington 3:10, 13 June 2019

May I start by thanking everyone across the House for their incredibly valuable contributions to what I would agree with the Minister was a constructive and illuminating debate. I particularly thank Sir David Amess and my hon. Friend Dr Drew for supporting and sponsoring this debate today.

As we have heard, it is generally understood that housing is particularly important, but that social housing is even more so. We have heard from across the country just how expensive housing can be in so many of our towns and cities. We have heard about multiples of 20 against average income, such is the expense of property—certainly in Cambridge, London and elsewhere.

We have also heard just how popular social housing and council housing can be and about the massive loss of stock we have suffered in recent decades. My hon. Friends the Members for Ipswich (Sandy Martin) and for Hammersmith (Andy Slaughter) gave good examples of what can be done when local authorities have the foresight and the ambition to deliver good-quality social housing. We also heard illustrations from my hon. Friend Siobhain McDonagh, who described the reality for her constituents and the hardship that they face.

Elsewhere, my hon. Friend Justin Madders talked about the struggles that people still face incurring the bedroom tax and asked why that tax still had not been cancelled. Jim Shannon highlighted very well the reality for young people in particular and explained what a struggle it is for millennials to get on the housing ladder. I also thank Alan Brown, who highlighted the very positive reality north of the border and described what it had been possible to achieve in delivering housing as a result of being liberated from some of the constraints we have here. He also talked about the challenges and the threats from universal credit and of Help to Buy.

I thank the shadow Minister, my hon. Friend Sarah Jones, for her excellent summary of the debate. I will not attempt to repeat that, but she rightly highlighted the reality of what has happened, as we find ourselves still reflecting on Grenfell two years on. She talked about all the mistakes that were made with Lakanal and described how people were indifferent and not listening. That case and those arguments have also been well set out in the campaign led by my hon. Friend Emma Dent Coad. I thank the Minister for his summary and for his warm words, and I look forward to working with him in the future.

Question put and agreed to.

Resolved,

That this House
recognises that there is a housing crisis with too few genuinely affordable homes to rent and buy;
further recognises that the number of new social rented homes built in recent years has been too low;
notes that the Government has set a target to build 300,000 homes a year, which is unlikely to be achieved without building more social homes;
further notes that Shelter’s recent report, A Vision for Social Housing, concluded that 3.1 million new social rented homes need to be built over the next 20 years;
and calls on the Government to adopt a target of building 155,000 social rented homes, including at least 100,000 council homes, each year from 2022.