Today [Thursday 20 June], Labour's Deputy Leader and Shadow Chancellor will pledge that renters will
be “better off” with Labour.
Outlining the action a Labour government will take to alleviate
pressures on tenants in the private rented sector, Labour
will crackdown on unscrupulous landlords ripping off
tenants with extortionate rents and lurid living conditions.
This comes as new data shows £750m per year draining from
leaky homes due to landlords failing to insulate. Labour
says this money could have been injected into the economy.
Labour will today pledge swift action to protect
renters, with a long-term promise to alleviate the crisis in
private renting by boosting housing supply, building 1.5 million
new homes over five years.
Labour will:
-
Slash fuel poverty and cut energy
bills, saving the average tenant £250 per year,
by requiring all landlords to meet stringent energy efficiency
standards by 2030.
-
Immediately ban no-fault evictions, so
that families have the security of knowing that landlords can't
kick them out for no reason.
-
Tackle respiratory and other health problems facing
renters by stamping out black mould, damp and
cold with new legal protections for tenants.
-
End rental bidding wars, so landlords can
no longer pit hopeful renters against each other in a fight to
see who can offer up a bigger sum.
-
End massive upfront payments, by capping
the amount of rent requested upfront, forcing renters to turn
to the ‘bank of mum and dad' just to get into the rental
market.
An affordable, secure rented sector is crucial to Labour's
mission of economic growth, allowing young people to save for
their own home, with more money in their pockets to spend in the
economy.
Our rip-off private rented sector is strangling growth, stopping
young people from saving to buy a home, supporting their local
high street, or moving to take up new opportunities. Businesses
struggle to get the staff they need to grow, as people are priced
out of local housing markets and can't find affordable places to
rent in commuting distance.
MP, Labour's Deputy Leader
and Shadow Housing Secretary, said:
“Time and time again, the Tories have failed to stand up for
renters. From endless delays to no-fault evictions, to failure to
sort damp, cold and mouldy homes, the Conservatives are failing
working people.
“Labour will call time on a decade of Tory vested interest and
put renters first. An affordable, secure private rented
sector is vital for economic growth, allowing young people to
save for a mortgage with more money in their pockets to spend in
the day-to-day economy. Our plans will support good
landlords but we are calling time on unscrupulous landlords
strangling growth.
“Labour will take action to protect renters, with an immediate
ban on no-fault evictions, an end to rental bidding wars and
extended protections against damp, mould and cold. The only real
way to make renting more affordable is to build more homes,
that's why we have a plan to build 1.5 million homes over five
years as an antidote to Britain's failing private rented
sector.
“Renters will be better off with Labour.”
Ends
Notes:
-
New data shows £750m per year draining from leaky
homes due to landlords failing to
insulate.
-
-
Labour's rental and housing reforms
will:
-
- Bring in a new deadline of 2030 for private landlords to
make sure the homes they rent are energy efficient.
- Ban ‘section 21' no fault evictions which mean landlords
can kick out families without any reason.
- Give every renter the same protection from damp, cold and
mould by extending Awaab's Law to private renters. Stop
rental bidding wars from forcing tenants to stump up more in
rent out of fear of losing out.
- Let tenants challenge unreasonable rent hikes and hold
landlords to account.
- Get Britain building so there's enough homes for renters
to have the option of affordable and social housing, or
getting on the housing ladder
- The Conservatives promised new regulations on energy
efficiency standards and the Renters Reform Bill, which would
have ended no-fault evictions, but was too weak to stand up to
vested interests in his own party and abandoned the pledges.
Before the measures were scrapped, 80% of landlords said they
had already prepared for the change.