Private Rented Sector Fleur Anderson (Putney) (Lab) 1. What steps
he is taking to reform the private rented sector.(902392) The
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing
and Communities (Jacob Young) The Renters (Reform) Bill will have
its Report stage on Wednesday 24 April. The Bill abolishes section
21 evictions, moves the sector to a system of periodic tenancies
and introduces a private rented sector property portal and
ombudsman,...Request free trial
Private Rented Sector
(Putney) (Lab)
1. What steps he is taking to reform the private rented
sector.(902392)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities ()
The Renters (Reform) Bill will have its Report stage on Wednesday
24 April. The Bill abolishes section 21 evictions, moves the
sector to a system of periodic tenancies and introduces a private
rented sector property portal and ombudsman, improving the system
for responsible tenants and good-faith landlords.
Ministers first promised to end no-fault evictions five years
ago. Since then, 85,000 households have been threatened with
no-fault evictions, including a constant stream of residents in
Putney. Does the Minister not agree that that was ample time to
implement the necessary improvements and that the delay has
caused immense suffering to people in the private rented
sector?
I agree with the hon. Lady that we need to abolish section 21
evictions as soon as possible. When it comes to the Bill, we
published the White Paper in 2022, we published the Bill in 2023
and we are bringing forward the Report stage on Wednesday.
Mr Speaker
I call the SNP spokesperson.
Ms Anum Qaisar (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
In 2019, the UK Government announced plans to outlaw no-fault
eviction notices. However, just last week, the housing charity
Shelter revealed that almost 1 million renters in England have
been served no-fault eviction notices since that announcement.
While the Government seem to be unable to get the rental reform
agenda past their Conservative Back Benchers, the Scottish
Parliament banned no-fault evictions back in 2017. Does the
Minister agree that that is yet another example of the Scottish
Parliament delivering for the people while Westminster
dysfunction only lets them down?
As I said to the hon. Member for Putney (), we are abolishing section
21 evictions. The Bill will return to the House on Wednesday.
Cost of Public Services: Coastal Areas
(St Austell and Newquay)
(Con)
2. What recent estimate he has made of the additional cost to the
public purse of councils delivering public services in coastal
areas.(902393)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities ()
Cornwall is one of the most beautiful areas of the country,
second only to Dorset. [Interruption.] Thank you. It has the
longest county coastline in England and, as such, its council
faces unique challenges in delivering services. The Government
are committed to reforming the local government funding landscape
in the next Parliament to deliver simpler, fairer and longer
settlements. As part of that process, the Government have
previously publicly announced that they are exploring options for
specific formulae for flooding and coastal erosion. We will
engage councils about those options as reform progresses.
The Government have already accepted the additional cost of
delivering services in rural areas through the rural services
delivery grant, but they have not yet accepted those additional
costs for coastal areas. Would the Minister consider establishing
a coastal services delivery grant to ensure that coastal regions
such as Cornwall, which as he said has the longest—and most
beautiful—coastline in the country, get the funding that they
need?
Simon Hoare
Second most beautiful, I remind my hon. Friend. He makes an
important point, representing as he does his constituents and the
wider county of Cornwall, and an interesting suggestion. Strong
points sit behind his argument. I would be delighted to meet him
to discuss that further, but he makes good points and gives me
food for thought.
Sarah Dyke (Somerton and Frome) (LD)
The cost of delivering services in Somerset is rising, with care
costs rising by 47% between 2022 and 2023, yet urban councils
receive about 38% more Government funding spending power per head
than rural councils. What steps is the Department taking to
address that inequality and help rural councils to deliver vital
public services?
Simon Hoare
As the hon. Lady will know, the rural services delivery grant
tries to reflect that as well, but if only the Lib Dem leadership
of her council had got on—as Dorset did—and delivered the
benefits of going unitary, rather than fiddling while Rome burns,
her situation might be a little better.
Metro Mayors: Local Economies
James Morris (Halesowen and Rowley Regis) (Con)
3. What assessment he has made of the impact of Metro Mayors on
their local economies.(902394)
Karl MᶜCartney (Lincoln) (Con)
10. What assessment he has made of the impact of Metro Mayors on
their local economies.(902402)
Dan Jarvis (Barnsley Central) (Lab)
19. What steps he is taking to increase engagement between his
Department and elected Mayors.(902412)
The Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities
(Michael Gove)
Our Mayors play a powerful role in driving economic growth,
improving public services and giving local areas a powerful voice
on the national stage. I met all the Mayors as a group before
Christmas, as well as Mayor Brabin, as chair of UK Mayors this
year, and a number of Mayors on an individual basis. I look
forward to meeting and working closely with all the Mayors,
collectively and individually, after the May elections, including
the three new Mayors who will be elected for the East Midlands,
the North-East Combined Authority, and York and North
Yorkshire.
James Morris
Since he was first elected in 2017, Andy Street has delivered £10
billion of new investment to the west midlands region, more
housing—particularly on brownfield land—and much-needed
investment in transport infrastructure across the region. Does
the Secretary of State agree that, when voters go to the polls
next week, they should support Andy Street to continue that track
record of delivery for the west midlands?
Michael Gove
I agree with my hon. Friend. Andy Street has been outstanding at
delivering jobs and more homes in the west midlands than in any
other region, according to housing targets. He has done so
despite the failure of Birmingham City Council, which was driven
into bankruptcy by Labour.
Karl MᶜCartney
Can my right hon. Friend further update colleagues and my
constituents on the progress of the Greater Lincolnshire
devolution deal, following the deals approved at upper tier
council level earlier this year?
Michael Gove
We have been consulting and we have listened, and we will have to
wait until after 2 May to say more. I am looking forward to
working with my hon. Friend to make Lincolnshire great again.
Dan Jarvis
Given that after 2 May there will be 12 metro Mayors directly
representing 27 million people in England, does the Secretary of
State think that there should be a dedicated formal structure
that will enable the metro Mayors to work more effectively with
Whitehall Government, rather than the somewhat ad hoc structures
that are currently in place?
Michael Gove
That is a fair point. The ad hoc structures that the hon.
Gentleman described work well. All the existing Mayors work well
together, and all party politics aside, it has been instructive
to see the kind words that Andy Burnham has directed towards Andy
Street and vice versa. Now that the mayoral model, which has
worked overall with one or two slight bumps in the road, has
reached a level of maturity, his point is very fair.
Keir Mather (Selby and Ainsty) (Lab)
Voters in the upcoming North Yorkshire mayoral election are
facing significant economic hardship and deserve to know that
their money is being spent responsibly. Does the Secretary of
State share my concern that one candidate in the North Yorkshire
mayoral race has made over £300 million of unfunded spending
commitments for the county? Could central Government perhaps
provide an assessment of the economic impact of such spending
commitments?
Michael Gove
It is striking that the Conservative candidate in North Yorkshire
is the only one who has a plan for growth, and a long-term plan
for York and North Yorkshire's economy. When it comes to value
for money for our Mayors, I should point out that the
Conservative Mayors for Tees Valley and for the West Midlands,
Ben Houchen and Andy Street, levy not a penny in extra mayoral
taxation, unlike the Labour Mayor in London, whose spendthrift
ways will see him thrown out on 2 May.
Mr Speaker
I call the shadow Secretary of State.
Angela Rayner (Ashton-under-Lyne) (Lab)
Despite that love-in, as the Mayor of the West Midlands, Andy
Street has over-promised and under-delivered. Almost 70% of
devolved housing funds have not been used, and he has done
nothing to tackle rogue landlords. The mayoral model can work,
and Sadiq Khan's affordable housebuilding in London is evidence
of that. When did the Secretary of State last meet Andy Street,
and did he raise those failures with him?
Michael Gove
I talk to Andy Street constantly because he is a model of what a
strong Mayor should be. The right hon. Lady talks about housing.
There are housing targets set at a regional level—which Mayor
missed them by most? Sadiq Khan in London. Which Mayor has
exceeded those targets? Andy Street in the west midlands. Sadiq
Khan has failed on housing, failed on crime and failed on
transport, and he will be kicked out on 2 May.
Angela Rayner
Roll on a general election. Sadiq Khan has been building a better
London for everyone. If the right hon. Gentleman wants more
evidence of Mayors working, he should look up north: Tracy
Brabin, Steve Rotheram and Andy Burnham have been bringing
transport services back under public control, giving better value
for money. In the Tees Valley, we see the opposite. The review
into Lord Houchen's mishandling of Teesworks found
“the principles of spending public money are not being
consistently observed.”
So why will the Secretary of State not give the National Audit
Office the chance to investigate?
Michael Gove
I am sure the right hon. Lady is very, very keen that all sorts
of matters are investigated properly by independent figures who
can be trusted, Tees Valley Ben Houchen has
done more than any other Metro Mayor to bring jobs and investment
into his region. The thousands of jobs created in Teesworks stand
in stark contrast to Labour's failure, from London to Liverpool,
to bring in the jobs required. Andy Street, I should reinforce,
is the single most successful Mayor in the country. That is why
both Andy and Ben will be re-elected on 2 May, alongside
Conservative Mayors in York and North Yorkshire, the East
Midlands and, of course, London.
Fire Defects: Remediation Costs
Clive Efford (Eltham) (Lab)
4. What steps he is taking to help prevent (a) leaseholders and
(b) tenants paying for the remediation of fire
defects.(902395)
The Minister for Housing, Planning and Building Safety (Lee
Rowley)
No qualifying leaseholder in a building above 11 metres in
England will be liable for cladding remediation costs. Where we
are able to do so and where they still exist, we are making those
who cause these issues pay to resolve them.
Clive Efford (Eltham) (Lab)
In my constituency, residents are asking for transparency in
their service charges. They are fearful that they are being
charged for surveys for fire remediation work, which is the
responsibility of the developer and not the people who live in
the flats and who are not the cause of those problems. What will
the Government do for people in Master Gunner Place or Grove
Place in my constituency, where people are asking questions but
not getting answers on why they are paying these excessive
charges? In one case, there was a 107% increase in the service
charge. The Government are making all the right noises, but I do
not see much result at the sharp end for my constituents.
Lee Rowley
I totally agree with the hon. Gentleman that it is absolutely
vital there is transparency in how, when and why leaseholders are
being charged. That is why we have done one thing and been doing
another thing in the past few weeks alone. Last week, on the new
building safety approach for high-rise buildings, we were very
clear in a joint letter about highlighting the importance of
temperate remuneration and cost. Secondly, we need to continue to
bring forward the reforms in the Leasehold and Freehold Reform
Bill, which will see a transformation in transparency on service
charges. The Government brought that Bill forward and it will
come through as soon as the other place has concluded its
observations.
Sir Julian Lewis (New Forest East) (Con)
The Minister has done good work in protecting leaseholders and
renters from remediation costs above 11 metres. As a leaseholder
myself, I am a bit baffled as to why people are not protected
when fire remediation measures are necessary below 11 metres. I
would be grateful if he could explain the Government's
reasoning.
Lee Rowley
When the Building Safety Act 2022, which put in place the
differentiation, was going through, we were very clear and asked
colleagues, on the Floor of the House, for any examples of where
there were potential issues below 11 metres. If my right hon.
Friend or any other Member has an issue, I would be very keen to
hear from them. The reality is that, over the past two years
nearly, we have received only 160 potential issues. Of those, we
can count on one hand where there has been a problem. We are
working with each of those three buildings to make the progress
we need to make.
Mr Speaker
I call the Chair of the Select Committee.
Mr Clive Betts (Sheffield South East) (Lab)
The Select Committee welcomed the more than £2 billion provided
through the building safety fund to private leaseholders with
regard to remediation due to fire safety works. On the other
hand, social housing providers received only £200 million, which
is about 10% of the amount going to private leaseholders. How can
it possibly be fair that in a block of flats a private
leaseholder gets their remediation costs paid, but in the same
flat next door a social housing tenant has to pay for the total
cost out of their rent? That simply is not fair. Ministers have
accepted the unfairness in the past. When will they do something
about it?
Lee Rowley
As my constituency neighbour recognises, there is, rightly, a
substantial amount of taxpayer subsidy for remediation. We are
trying to ensure that that taxpayer subsidy is then clawed back
from those responsible for the problems in the first place. Where
there are challenges and issues with registered providers, we are
very happy to talk to them. We have done that and we have made
changes
Theresa Villiers (Chipping Barnet) (Con)
Following a fire last summer, timber and unplasticized polyvinyl
chloride cladding on 586 homes in the borough of Barnet was
identified as needing remediation. A number of those homes are in
my constituency. Homeowners are facing bills of £23,000. Will the
Government help them bills?
Lee Rowley
This important issue is very much on our radar, and one that we
are working through. I had meetings about it only a few days ago,
and I continue to do so. Perhaps I could update my right hon.
Friend separately outside the Chamber with further information
about our proposed approach.
Mr Speaker
I call the shadow Minister.
Matthew Pennycook (Greenwich and Woolwich) (Lab)
Soaring service charges are placing an intolerable financial
strain on leaseholders and those with shared ownership across the
country. Among the main drivers of the eye-watering demands with
which many have been served over recent months are staggering
rises in buildings insurance premiums and the passing on of
significant costs relating to the functioning of the new building
safety regime. Given that many leaseholders are being pushed to
the very limits of what they can afford, do the Government now
accept that the service charge transparency provisions in the
Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill—and pleading with freeholders
to take a temperate approach—are not enough, and that Ministers
should explore with urgency what further measures could be
included to protect leaseholders better from unreasonable charges
and give them more control over their buildings?
Lee Rowley
The hon. Gentleman is aware that our substantial reform package
sets out clearly and transparently the changes that are being
introduced and what people are expected to pay. It could not be
clearer than it is in the legislation, which is one of my reasons
for wanting it to proceed as quickly as possible. When there are
issues, we are keen to look at them and, where we can, take
action, but the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill is designed to
improve transparency and reduce problems, and I am sure that it
will do that once it has completed its passage here and in the
other place.
Local Plans
Dr Luke Evans (Bosworth) (Con)
5. Whether he has made an estimate of the number of planning
authorities that do not have an up-to-date local
plan.(902396)
The Minister for Housing, Planning and Building Safety (Lee
Rowley)
At the end of March 2024, 110 local planning authorities—a third
of the total—had adopted a local plan in the past five years,
while 291 had plans that were more than five years old. Of those,
more than half are making progress towards updating their plans.
The Government have made it clear that authorities should
continue to update their plans because that is the best way to
deliver development that is in the interests of local
communities.
Dr Evans
My Liberal Democrat-run local council is one of those without an
up-to-date local plan. In fact, it has now delayed its plan until
2026, which means that places such as Burbage have housing
without full protection. That puts pressure on our GP services,
our school places and even our roads. What more can the
Government do to persuade Liberal Democrat-run Hinckley and
Bosworth Borough Council to ensure that its plan is established
and updated so that my residents have the required
protections?
Lee Rowley
My hon. Friend has raised this matter in the Chamber before, and
it is a great example of why it is so important that Bosworth has
this Conservative Member of Parliament to highlight the
challenges and failures of the Liberal Democrat council.
Ultimately, the Government will not hesitate to take action
against councils that are not fulfilling their obligations.
Indeed, my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State has done so
over the past few months, and we will continue to do so, because
we expect councils to do their job and put their plans in place.
When Liberal Democrat councils fail to do that, we will call them
out.
Rachael Maskell (York Central) (Lab/Co-op)
York has one of the worst housing crises in the country, yet we
have not had a local plan to restrain developers for 68 years.
Why has it taken this Tory Government more than 14 years to
deliver a local plan for York?
Lee Rowley
I am relatively clear that the Labour party has been in charge of
York for a substantial proportion of the last 14 years. If the
hon. Lady wants an answer to her question about why there is no
local plan, she should look to her own party.
Dame Maria Miller (Basingstoke) (Con)
To help local authorities finalise their local plans, my hon.
Friend and his ministerial colleagues have made significant
changes to the planning rules. As a result, Wiltshire has cut its
house building by 9,000, North Somerset has reduced its house
building plans by 29%, and Three Rivers and others are doing
likewise, to ensure that local plans better reflect their
communities. Does my hon. Friend expect all local authorities to
consider whether the new rules apply in their communities?
Lee Rowley
It is vital for local councils to follow what is in the national
planning policy framework. We know that where local plans are in
place councils build more houses, but, most important, they build
more houses in the right places, so that communities can be
confident that they are being built where they are needed.
Tim Farron (Westmorland and Lonsdale) (LD)
The problem with the Government's developer-led approach to
planning is that it means that we see houses built for demand,
but not for local need. In a community such as the Lake District,
developers will sell anything they can build, but will it meet
the need of local communities? Often it will not. Will the
Minister ensure that local authorities and national parks putting
together local plans are allowed to designate land specifically
and exclusively for genuinely affordable housing so that they can
say no to the houses we do not need and yes to the ones we
do?
Lee Rowley
As the hon. Gentleman knows, the planning system has a
substantial amount of flexibility—it is one of the
frustrations—to ensure that local councils do the right thing.
Where they do the right thing, they should be celebrated; where
they do not, we should criticise them and hope that they are
thrown out. If the hon. Gentleman is arguing against
developer-led planning—capitalism, as it is otherwise known—that
is a very interesting place for liberalism in this country to
go.
Community Ownership Fund
Dr James Davies (Vale of Clwyd) (Con)
6. What assessment his Department has made of the potential
impact of the community ownership fund on local
communities.(902397)
Simon Baynes (Clwyd South) (Con)
12. What assessment his Department has made of the potential
impact of the community ownership fund on local
communities.(902404)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities (Jacob Young)
Community ownership can boost local connections and pride of
place, and bolster resilience. So far, we have awarded about £103
million to 333 projects across the UK. We are working with an
external evaluation partner on an evaluation of the fund. We are
already seeing some great examples of COF projects making a real
difference to their communities, such as Grow the Glens in
Northern Ireland and East Boldre community stores in the
south-east of England.
Dr Davies
There have already been three worthy beneficiaries of the
community ownership fund in my constituency: the village shop in
Llandyrnog; the Salusbury Arms in Tremeirchion, which the
Minister has visited; and Rhyl football club, which hopes to
secure the future of its ground, Belle Vue. His Department has
been very helpful throughout, but what further advice and
guidance can be provided for applicants in future rounds?
Jacob Young
I enjoyed visiting the Salusbury Arms with my hon. Friend and
raising a glass to the community there. Ahead of round 4, we
launched a brand-new expression of interest process, which
provides interested applicants with an outcome within minutes. To
support applicants at the fourth stage, we have also updated the
prospectus and other guidance on gov.uk. We want to help as many
communities as possible to benefit from the fund, spreading the
benefits of levelling up nationwide.
Simon Baynes
Does the Minister agree that the recent grant of £452,700 to the
Owain Glyndŵr hotel in Corwen, in Clwyd South, is a wonderful
example of the hugely beneficial impact of the community
ownership fund on local communities? The grant will enable this
much-loved hotel to play a central role in the town again, and to
benefit from the reopening of Corwen station and the other
projects in Corwen arising from my Clwyd South levelling-up
fund.
Jacob Young
I thank my hon. Friend for highlighting that exciting project,
which seeks to secure the future of the Owain Glyndŵr hotel and
develop it into a community social hub showcasing the life and
history of the area. I agree that the project is a great example
of what the community ownership fund seeks to do across our
United Kingdom. The fund not only safeguards priceless and
much-loved local assets, but supports ambition and builds
opportunity in local areas. I will be visiting north Wales in the
very near future and will test my diary to see whether it is
possible to swing by and say, “Da iawn.”
John Cryer (Leyton and Wanstead) (Lab)
The Minister mentioned pubs that have been rescued and secured
for the community, but where historic local pubs, which were at
one time hubs of the community, have been wrecked by absentee
owners and therefore require capital investment, does he envisage
the funding being used in that regard as well?
Jacob Young
The fund is open to community groups, charities, and town and
parish councils. I cannot promise the hon. Gentleman that the pub
to which he refers would be eligible, but I am more than happy to
meet him following this session to get further details.
Sir Chris Bryant (Rhondda) (Lab)
Mr Speaker, I know you know that there could not possibly be a
better project to receive funding from the Government than the
Rhondda tunnel, which would connect Blaencwm and Blaengwynfi—I am
very happy to dangle all the Ministers down the hole and into the
tunnel, if they ever want to come and see it. I know the
Secretary of State knows all about it, because I had two meetings
with him about it several years ago. I have met lots of Ministers
who have privately been very supportive and told me to apply for
this, that or the other fund, but not a single penny has yet
transpired. An official has recently told Rhondda Cynon Taf
County Borough Council that it should make a specific exemption
for an application for money. Is that still a possibility, to
ensure that the Rhondda tunnel comes to pass?
Jacob Young
I do not think that the community ownership fund is the
appropriate fund. As I have just said to the hon. Member for
Leyton and Wanstead (John Cryer), the community ownership fund is
open to charities, to community groups and to town and parish
councils, but with regard to the hon. Gentleman's tunnel project,
I would be more than happy to meet him and identify what funding
opportunities are available.
Towns Fund
James Wild (North West Norfolk) (Con)
7. What assessment he has made of the potential impact of the
towns fund on local communities.(902398)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities (Jacob Young)
As part of their town investment plan, places were required to
consult extensively with local communities and to evidence how
this feedback shaped their plan. The impact of the towns fund on
local communities is also a crucial part of the towns fund impact
evaluation, to be published in early 2026.
James Wild
One success of the towns fund is the breadth of projects, which
in King's Lynn include Shakespeare's St George's guildhall, a new
community library and adult skills centre and a school of nursing
studies. Can my hon. Friend confirm that the very welcome extra
£20 million through the long-term plan for towns that Lynn has
just been awarded can be used to complement those schemes as well
as to secure other investment into the area?
Jacob Young
I thank my hon. Friend for his commitment to levelling up in
King's Lynn and across Norfolk. Our long-term plan for towns puts
power back into the hands of local people. Each town must set up
a new town board, comprised of local community representatives
and the Members of Parliament for the respective area, who are
responsible for developing the long-term plan for their area,
underpinned by evidence of extensive community engagement. This
plan can include the regeneration projects that my hon. Friend
has mentioned, if that is considered a local priority. I look
forward to working with him and to seeing the plans when they are
finally brought forward.
Jim Shannon (Strangford) (DUP)
I thank the Minister for his answers. He will recall that I asked
some time ago about the Ards and North Down Council's Whitespots
project—a historical project for tourism that relates to the
second world war and also to the history of mining in the area.
The Minister said that when the Northern Ireland Assembly was up
and running, he would be keen to ensure that the project could
take place. Can he confirm that the moneys necessary for the
project are there, and will he ensure that he, as Minister, does
everything he can to make it happen?
Jacob Young
I cannot give the hon. Gentleman the assurance that he seeks, but
I can say that the £30 million that was set aside for Northern
Ireland in round 3 of the levelling-up fund has been given to the
Northern Ireland Executive as part of the Executive reformation
fund. I was in Northern Ireland over the recess, where we were
celebrating more than £435 million of levelling-up funding going
to Northern Ireland since 2019.
>
I call the shadow Minister.
Justin Madders (Ellesmere Port and Neston) (Lab)
It is now approaching five years since the towns fund was
launched, promising £3.6 billion of investment to level up the
country. Most of it remains unspent, and the cross-party Public
Accounts Committee has said that the Department for Levelling Up
could not
“give any compelling examples of what had been delivered so
far”.
That is a damning assessment of this five years of the fund,
never mind after 14 years in power—so, Minister, why are this
Government such a failure?
Jacob Young
I think that is quite poor, Mr Speaker. The hon. Gentleman's
constituency has itself benefited from £11.1 million of UK shared
prosperity funding and £13.4 million from the levelling up fund.
Next to him I see the hon. Member for Oldham West and Royton (Jim
McMahon), whose constituency has benefited from £24.4 million
from the towns fund. Oldham is also the recipient of £10.8
million from the future high streets fund. We are levelling up
right across the country, including in the hon. Gentleman's
constituency.
Government Funding: Local Authorities
Helen Morgan (North Shropshire) (LD)
8. What assessment he has made of the adequacy of the level of
Government funding allocated to local authorities.(902399)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities (Simon Hoare)
In answer to the hon. Lady's question, we make continuous
assessment with regard to the adequacy of funding. In this
financial year we have made £64.7 billion available to local
government in England, an above-inflation increase for local
authorities as their real-terms increase in core spending power
is now up to £4.5 billion or 7.5% in cash terms. That includes
the additional measures for local authorities, worth £600
million, that we announced on 25 January, having listened to the
views of local government, to her views when she engaged in the
consultation and of hon. and right hon.
Friends across Shropshire.
Helen Morgan
I thank the Minister for his answer, but we have seen Shropshire
Council make £50 million of cuts this year, and we are told that
there will be £60 million of cuts next year to avoid a section
144 notice. Local residents are particularly concerned about the
potential closure of recycling centres and a likely increase in
fly-tipping across our beautiful countryside. Does the Minister
agree that rural councils are in danger of delivering nothing
more than statutory services if things continue? Will he consider
adjusting the way that funding is allocated so that rural
councils are given an amount that reflects the cost of delivering
services in their area?
Simon Hoare
The hon. Lady is right to point to the need to review the
formula, which is a commitment for the next Parliament. She will
probably be aware—I hope she is—of the £8.9 million extra that
Shropshire Council received this year through the rural services
delivery grant in order to deliver those sorts of services. Do I
think rural councils have to reduce to statutory services alone?
No. All my engagement with the sector points to a vibrancy and a
commitment to innovation, shaping places and improving the lives
of people up and down the country, including in Shropshire.
Dame Andrea Jenkyns (Morley and Outwood) (Con)
Trevor from the Drighlington memory café—Trevor has been ably
supported by our fantastic Morley town mayor—Nicola from the
Morley grief group, Dan from WF3 Kindness and Christine from the
veterans luncheon club are just some of the amazing volunteers
and community groups in my area who give up their time to help
local people. Will the Minister join me in thanking and paying
tribute to the unsung heroes in our communities across the
country?
Simon Hoare
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. We should never lose an
opportunity to trumpet our thanks to people like Trevor,
Christine and all our volunteers up and down the country who make
such a difference to people's lives. They work alongside councils
and other bodies to make life better and happier, and to make
places more pleasant to live. I thank them unreservedly.
Matt Western (Warwick and Leamington) (Lab)
Funding cuts are adding to the clear pressures on local
government around the country. One such example is developers who
come armed with substantial funds and resources to contest their
planning applications. Locally, Warwick District Council had an
application just last week that the planning committee was
essentially advised to allow because of a fear of not having the
financial resources to contest it. I have written to the
Secretary of State about this issue. Should we be extremely
concerned about it nationally?
Simon Hoare
Each planning authority has a quasi-judicial role to adjudge
planning applications against national and local plans, and I
have every confidence that planning committees up and down the
country do that. If the hon. Gentleman wishes to refer to a 7.5%
cash-terms increase for local government in this financial year
as a cut, that is a very eccentric definition even for a Labour
Member.
Priti Patel (Witham) (Con)
Ministers are aware that Maldon District Council was allocated £5
million of levelling-up funding. My right hon. Friend the Member
for Maldon (Sir John Whittingdale), the council and I have been
informed that the funding must be spent on cultural projects,
despite our having a local plan that will see the closure of St
Peter's Hospital. We want the money to be spent on levelling up
health and wellbeing, which is one of the five principles of
levelling up. Will Ministers urgently review all our
representations so that we can work at pace to sort out this
terrible issue and level up our health situation?
Simon Hoare
My right hon. Friend makes a powerful point, and I know St
Peter's Hospital pretty well from a previous life. The
Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities, my hon. Friend the Member for Redcar (Jacob Young),
has signalled to me that he is aware of the issue, has sympathy
with my right hon. Friend and will be happy to meet her in pretty
quick time to discuss further details.
Mr Speaker
I call the shadow Minister.
Jim McMahon (Oldham West and Royton) (Lab/Co-op)
Working people are paying the price of the cost of living crisis,
but is it not the truth that the Liz Truss mini-Budget did not
occur in a vacuum? There is a pattern of the Tories shifting the
tax burden on to hard-pressed households. Council tax bills have
rocketed by almost £500 since the Tories came to power, on top of
which Conservative councils charge residents almost £280 more
than their Labour counterparts. As voters go to the polls on 2
May, does the Minister hope that they will somehow forget the
council tax bombshell facing them? Or does he expect that more
candidates will follow the west midlands campaign and
ditch the toxic Tory brand completely?
Simon Hoare
The hon. Gentleman wins first prize in the brass neck of the
afternoon competition; I remind him gently and politely about the
situation in Birmingham. It is well known by residents up and
down the land that Conservative-led councils are more efficient,
deliver greater improvement at pace and are far more focused on
delivering for their residents. Colleagues and I will take that
proud record to the voters during this local election campaign,
and I have every confidence we will triumph in it.
Community Ownership Fund
Mrs Flick Drummond (Meon Valley) (Con)
9. What the criteria are for allocation of round 4 of the
community ownership fund.(902401)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities (Jacob Young)
Our decision-making criteria for the community ownership fund can
be found in the published explanatory note on gov.uk. Round 4
window 1 has now closed and will be assessed according to those
criteria. Round 4 window 2 will open in the coming weeks.
Mrs Drummond
I was delighted to hear that so many projects have received a
large amount of money to take over community centres, heritage
buildings, pubs and sporting facilities. The list also includes
green spaces, so will the Minister confirm that if a community
group wanted to buy part of a chalk stream that is for sale for
the benefit of that community, that would be within the scope of
the community ownership fund?
Jacob Young
I would be happy to meet my hon. Friend to discuss this matter.
We have funded similar land purchases, but this will be dependent
on the factors locally.
Rough Sleeping
Paula Barker (Liverpool, Wavertree) (Lab)
11. What progress he has made on ending rough
sleeping.(902403)
Will Quince (Colchester) (Con)
13. What steps his Department is taking to end rough
sleeping.(902405)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities (Felicity Buchan)
The Government are committed to ending rough sleeping. We
published our cross-government strategy “Ending rough sleeping
for good” in September 2022, and we are investing an
unprecedented £2.4 billion to tackle homelessness and rough
sleeping over three years. Rough sleeping levels were 18% lower
in 2023 than they were at the peak in 2017 and they were 9% lower
than pre-pandemic levels.
Paula Barker
This Government and Department have presided over a litany of
failures. The Conservative party has pledged to end rough
sleeping by the end of this Parliament. I have to disagree with
the hon. Lady, because rough sleeping numbers are yet again on
the up. Instead of fulfilling their manifesto commitment, the
Government have prioritised criminalising the homeless, rather
than ending homelessness. Even many Conservative Back Benchers
cannot support that, so when will this Department's leadership
grow a backbone and tell their colleagues in the Home Office to
shelve the pernicious plans that exist within the Criminal
Justice Bill?
Felicity Buchan
This Government are absolutely committed to ending rough
sleeping, which is why we are investing £2.4 billion.
Importantly, £1.2 billion is going into prevention, so that we
prevent homelessness before it happens. I want to address the
point about the Criminal Justice Bill. The Government are clear
that no one should be criminalised for having nowhere to live.
The Bill gives powers to the police and local authorities only
where behaviour causes damage, distress, harassment or
disruption. Guidance will be issued that makes it clear that
outreach and support should be prioritised.
Will Quince
I welcome the fact that the Government are investing £2.4 billion
on tackling homelessness and rough sleeping. Notwithstanding what
the Minister just said, does she agree that we need to help
people off the streets, not risk criminalising them, as is
regrettably proposed in part of the Criminal Justice Bill?
Felicity Buchan
I thank my hon. Friend for his words welcoming Government
expenditure on tackling rough sleeping and homelessness. The
Government are very focused on helping the most vulnerable in our
society, who are often rough sleepers. That is a cross-government
effort. For instance, I work closely with the Department for
Education on care leavers and I work closely with the Department
of Health and Social Care on those who have addictions. I
reassure my hon. Friend that no one will be criminalised simply
for sleeping rough.
Mr Speaker
I call the shadow Minister.
Mike Amesbury (Weaver Vale) (Lab)
As well as trying to criminalise rough sleepers, put them in jail
and give them a hefty fine, it is crystal clear that the
Government will not meet their target to end rough sleeping by
the end of 2024. Rough sleeping is all too plain to see—as we
walk into this place or go to any city or town, we see the tragic
consequences of Government policies. Is it not now time for
Ministers to do the right thing: end section 21 no-fault
evictions for good—no ifs, no buts; no excuses and narratives
about the courts—and build the homes for social rent at the scale
the country needs? If they do not do that, we will.
Felicity Buchan
We are abolishing section 21 and building affordable homes. Where
are affordable homes not being built? In London.
Planning System
Andrew Selous (South West Bedfordshire) (Con)
14. What steps he is taking to help improve the efficiency of the
planning system.(902406)
The Minister for Housing, Planning and Building Safety (Lee
Rowley)
We are taking significant steps to speed up the planning system.
In large infrastructure projects, that is through the nationally
significant infrastructure projects action plan and the “Getting
Great Britain building again” policy paper. In relation to the
TCPA, we are offering greater clarity through the republication
of the national planning policy framework, greater consistency
through instructing local councils to ensure that they discharge
their responsibilities, and greater capacity through additional
support for local councils.
Andrew Selous
Can I convey the extreme irritation of two parishes in my
constituency that have had five locations for a mobile phone mast
turned down? Given that mobile connectivity is now an essential
requirement, is it not time that local authorities advised on
which technically feasible locations they would be prepared to
grant planning permission? Local people could then say where they
were happiest for such projects to go, and we would end this
stupid cat-and-mouse game that wastes time and means people do
not get the connectivity they need.
Lee Rowley
My hon. Friend is right that connectivity is vital in all our
communities. It is incumbent upon local councils, including his
council in Bedfordshire, to ensure that they are providing the
greatest clarity possible for that connectivity and that it is
put in place.
Interfaith Dialogue
Kirsten Oswald (East Renfrewshire) (SNP)
15. What steps his Department is taking to help promote
interfaith dialogue.(902407)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities (Felicity Buchan)
This Government are extremely supportive of efforts to bring
together people of different faiths and beliefs. The faith
Minister meets regularly with faith leaders to encourage these
efforts, and the Department has funded a range of partners,
including Near Neighbours and Strengthening Faith Institutions,
to organise local level interfaith dialogue.
Kirsten Oswald
I thank the Minister for her answer, but two months ago the
Secretary of State announced that he would pull funding from the
Inter Faith Network, which is the largest interfaith charity on
these islands. It will close next week, after 40 years. It is an
astonishing decision by the UK Government to close Britain's main
forum for Jewish-Muslim dialogue now. The Secretary of State
could still reverse that very poor decision, but that would have
to happen this week. What are the chances of that?
Felicity Buchan
Let me explain what occurred. The closure of the Inter Faith
Network is a matter for the Inter Faith Network, as an
independent charity; it is not a matter for Government. We have
always made it very clear to all charities that receive
Government funding that they need to have sustainable sources of
other funding. In my response to the urgent question about a
month ago, I made clear the reasons for the closure. To repeat,
the decision to withdraw the funding was taken because of the
appointment of a member of the Muslim Council of Britain as a
trustee. Governments of various different hues have decided that
they will not deal with the Muslim Council of Britain.
Topical Questions
Patricia Gibson (North Ayrshire and Arran) (SNP)
T1. If he will make a statement on his departmental
responsibilities.(902417)
The Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities
(Michael Gove)
SHiFT is an inspirational charity run by a visionary social
entrepreneur, Sophie Humphreys. It works in order to ensure that
young people at risk of engaging with the criminal justice system
are diverted to better outcomes. On Thursday, two new SHiFT
interventions will open in Middlesbrough and in Redcar and
Cleveland, with the support of £3.9 million from my Department.
That is proof that when it comes to intervening early to give
young people a better life, it is a Conservative Government and a
Conservative Mayor in Tees Valley who are delivering for the most
vulnerable.
Patricia Gibson
The levelling-up funding awarded to my constituency three years
ago for the upgrade of the B714 has still not been delivered.
However, when I have raised concerns that the funding is
insufficient for the upgrade, given inflationary pressures, the
Secretary of State for Levelling Up told me to raise the matter
with the Department for Transport, which in turn referred me back
to the Secretary of State. Can I have an explanation from the
Secretary of State as to how approved projects can proceed as
envisaged, even if funding is delivered, when inflation is not
factored into the funding?
Michael Gove
I am grateful to the hon. Lady for making that point. I can offer
her, and also the Member of the Scottish Parliament for North
Ayrshire and North Ayrshire Council, a meeting with me, so that
we can deliver this project, because I know that she is
absolutely committed to ensuring that the levelling-up fund—UK
Government money—is spent effectively in her constituency. That
is proof that we work better together.
Virginia Crosbie (Ynys Môn) (Con)
T4. Ynys Môn is looking forward to hosting the fourth Islands
Forum on 7 and 8 May. It is an opportunity to showcase our
heritage, culture and language. It is also an opportunity for
Ministers to see at first hand how the £17 million from the UK
levelling-up fund is transforming Holyhead. Will the Secretary of
State accept my invitation to visit St Cybi's church, the
Ucheldre centre and the Newry beach shelters to see how the UK
Government are creating jobs and a brighter future for Holyhead?
And will he sign up to my Aldi to Amlwch campaign?(902420)
Michael Gove
Diolch. I am looking forward more than I can say to visiting Ynys
Môn. This is a fantastic example of a brilliant Conservative MP
securing funding for Wales, for the Welsh language, for Welsh
jobs and for Welsh investment. May I say that Anglesey has never
flourished in the way it is now flourishing with her as its
MP?
Mr Speaker
I call the SNP spokesperson.
Ms Anum Qaisar (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
We know that the Tories continually prioritise their banker mates
over the rest of the country. An example of that was in the
spring Budget when the Chancellor announced levelling-up funding
for Canary Wharf—an area that is home to some of the world's
biggest banks—which will receive more that £16,000 per head in
funding commitments compared with Scotland. With the Leader of
the Opposition and his Labour party backing Tory tax and spending
plans and U-turning on capping bankers' bonuses, does the
Secretary of State agree that the Labour party offers no real
alternative for the people of Scotland?
Mr Speaker
I just remind everyone that we are on topical questions.
Michael Gove
I think SNP press releases have suffered recently as a result of
the travails that the chief executive of that party has been
suffering, but as SNP press releases go, that has to be one of
the weakest I have ever heard in this House. The Scottish
Government are closing VisitScotland centres, they cannot deliver
ferries, Scotland is plunging down the educational league tables,
and, when it comes to delivering services in Scotland, theatres,
community centres and councils are coming to us for cash. The
Scottish Government are a disaster, and all the hon. Lady can do
is repeat the failed talking points—
Mr Speaker
Order. Secretary of State, that is completely outrageous, after I
had just said that we are on topicals. Please do not take
advantage of your own Members. It is not fair to them and it is
not fair to the rest of the Chamber.
Selaine Saxby (North Devon) (Con)
T5. What steps is my right hon. Friend taking to attract
long-term landlords back to small coastal towns?(902421)
The Minister for Housing, Planning and Building Safety (Lee
Rowley)
My hon. Friend has been a long-standing campaigner for balance
within coastal communities. I know that both she and colleagues
from the south-west and elsewhere are very keen to see some of
the reforms that the Government are introducing on short-term
lets and the changes to the planning system.
John Spellar (Warley) (Lab)
T2. In the 2019 Conservative manifesto, the Government made this
commitment:“We will continue with our reforms to leasehold
including implementing our ban on the sale of new leasehold
homes, restricting ground rents to a peppercorn, and providing
necessary mechanisms of redress for tenants.”That still has not
happened, so either they did not believe it then, they had not
thought it through, or the Minister has been nobbled by the Prime
Minister. Which one is it?(902418)
Michael Gove
Our Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill is making great progress
in the House of Lords. It is being debated today and I look
forward to the right hon. Gentleman supporting it when it comes
back here and gets on to the statute book.
Mr Speaker
I call Mr Richard Bacon—not here.
Dan Jarvis (Barnsley Central) (Lab)
T3. Given the proximity to the local and general elections, can
Ministers give an assurance that the joint election security
preparedness unit has all the resources do the job?(902419)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities (Simon Hoare)
This is a tremendously serious issue. My Department and other
Government Departments, led by the Security Minister in the Home
Office, are spending a huge amount of time, effort and resource
in ensuring the safety of candidates; the safety, security and
robustness of the process; and that all those who wish to take
part in our democratic functions, in whichever fora they happen
to manifest themselves, can do so safely and securely. That is a
very firm commitment. The hon. Member will know that we are
dealing with that as a serious matter.
Wendy Morton (Aldridge-Brownhills) (Con)
T9. In constituencies such as Aldridge-Brownhills, our green belt
; and once it has gone, it has
gone forever. But in the west midlands, thanks to the leadership
and vision of Mayor Andy Street and his “brownfield first”
approach, we have seen 16,000 new homes built, and thousands of
new jobs on brownfield land. Does my right hon. Friend agree that
that clearly demonstrates that we can build the new homes we need
and protect the green belt, and that it is Andy Street who is
setting the pace and leading the way in the west
midlands?(902425)
Michael Gove
That is spot on. It is Andy Street and Conservative councils in
Walsall, Dudley and Solihull that are delivering houses and
protecting the green belt. That is better for economic growth,
better for the environment, and better than bankrupt Labour
Birmingham.
Rachel Hopkins (Luton South) (Lab)
T6. Over 1,000 families in Luton South are stuck in temporary
accommodation, with wait times ranging from three to nine months
for a one-bed property to eight to nine years for a three-bed.
Across the country there has been a staggering 119% increase in
temporary accommodation numbers since 2019. Does the Minister
agree that that is just a direct cost of 14 years of Conservative
failure on housing?(902422)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities (Felicity Buchan)
The Government are very focused on temporary accommodation. That
is why we are investing £2.4 billion, of which £1.2 billion is
specifically for the homelessness prevention grant. In the last
Budget, we increased the local housing rate to the 30th percentile. That
is worth £1.2 billion. We have also increased the local authority
housing fund.
Jane Hunt (Loughborough) (Con)
Please can my right hon. Friend set out what the Government are
doing to ensure that more young people can live in their own home
as early as possible in their adult lives, and specifically
whether greater consideration can be given to mechanisms that
result in only one affordable payment being made a month, rather
than one mortgage payment and one rental payment?
Michael Gove
My hon. Friend makes an important point. We need to look to
reform both the mortgage market and our planning system. We will
bring forward further steps on both in the coming weeks.
Tim Farron (Westmorland and Lonsdale) (LD)
T7. In communities such as Kendal, Appleby, Allithwaite and
Milnthorpe, developers have used viability assessments to renege
on building desperately needed and genuinely affordable homes, so
will the Government give planning authorities the power to
declare null and void any planning permission where the developer
cannot or will not deliver the affordable homes that they had
promised?(902423)
Michael Gove
I know how important it is to deliver affordable homes in the
Lake district, in the hon. Gentleman's constituency. close look at the examples
he cites, to ensure that we are not killing the geese that lay
the golden eggs.
Mr Tobias Ellwood (Bournemouth East) (Con)
Tourism is vital to Bournemouth's economy, and half our visitors
come by car. A few choose to park on double yellow lines for the
day, as the parking penalty is only £35, unlike here in London
where it is £65, increasing to £130 if not paid promptly. Does
the Secretary of State agree that it would be immensely helpful,
and would ensure that emergency vehicle access is not blocked,
were Bournemouth allowed to operate the same penalties as we have
in London?
Michael Gove
My right hon. Friend is right: antisocial parking is a blight
outside London, and we need to review extending the powers that
are currently exercised in London to other parts of the
country.
Mr Virendra Sharma (Ealing, Southall) (Lab)
T10. Time and again, leasehold owners come to me with unfair
bills for service charges. They are inflated, and they are even
for undelivered services. When I get involved, they are often
dropped by a third instantly. What will the Government do to
ensure that developers are not trying to rip off homeowners, and
instead get bills right the first time?(902426)
Michael Gove
Fair point. Frank Dobson said that he was going to reform the
leasehold system in 1995. We are doing it now. The Leasehold and
Freehold Reform Bill, which the Minister for Housing, Planning
and Building Safety, my hon. Friend the Member for North East
Derbyshire (Lee Rowley), is piloting, will bring relief to
leaseholders.
Jason McCartney (Colne Valley) (Con)
A raft of Labour councillors in Kirklees have resigned from their
party, with one of them describing their leadership as a “toxic
swamp,” so it will come as no surprise to my right hon. Friend
that the local Conservative campaign to split Kirklees and get
better leadership and accountability is really gathering
momentum. Does he agree that leadership needs to be locally
driven, and that the best way to achieve that is to vote for more
Conservative councillors on 2 May—
Mr Speaker
Order. This is not fair. Just tell me which questions you don't
want, and it will make my job easier.
Michael Gove
My hon. Friend is absolutely right: we need change in Kirklees.
The best way in which people can demonstrate their desire for
change and the reconfiguration of Kirklees is by voting
Conservative on 2 May.
Alex Sobel (Leeds North West) (Lab/Co-op)
Today is Earth Day. The Government introduced the zero carbon
homes standard and the code for sustainable homes and then
scrapped them. The future homes standard now has centralised
support, but local authorities such as Leeds want to go above
planning policy to reach higher standards. Why will the Secretary
of State not allow Leeds to build even better zero carbon
homes?
Michael Gove
We have a good relationship with Leeds City Council, and indeed
with its leader and chief executive, so let me investigate.
Peter Gibson (Darlington) (Con)
Ben Houchen has done a remarkable job of saving our airport,
overseeing the redevelopment of Teesworks, and securing new jobs.
Does my right hon. Friend agree that, given Ben's record of
delivering and the promise of more, voters should back him on 2
May?
Mr Speaker
That is an easy one.
Michael Gove
It is an easy one! You are right, Mr Speaker: everyone should
back Ben Houchen—
Mr Speaker
Let me help: it is an easy one for you to answer. Now let us move
on.
Deidre Brock (Edinburgh North and Leith) (SNP)
I thank the Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing
and Communities, the hon. Member for North Dorset (Simon Hoare),
for his reply to my letter of 21 March. He said that a short
paper on the topic of the Union was prepared by officials and
presented to the UK Government in July 2020. However, a media
report at the time suggested that an employee of Hanbury Strategy
had provided data and helped to prepare that paper for the
Cabinet. Was public money used for the insights that Hanbury
Strategy prepared for that paper, and when will the public get to
see them?
Michael Gove
Once again, I have to admire the sheer chutzpah of Scottish
National party Members talking about the misappropriation of
cash. However, as I mentioned earlier, the Scottish Government's
budget has led to the closure of 25 tourist information centres
and a variety of other ventures that are trying to get investment
into Scotland, whereas the UK Government are providing investment
in Scotland—proving once again that we are better together.
Martin Vickers (Cleethorpes) (Con)
My constituents are increasingly concerned about the number of
planning applications being approved—particularly in rural
areas—when the infrastructure and public services quite evidently
cannot cope with the demand. What plans do Ministers have to
ensure that local residents have more say in future?
Michael Gove
The new national planning policy framework, as enacted by this
Front-Bench team, will ensure that local voices determine the
shape of local communities.
Stephen Kinnock (Aberavon) (Lab)
My constituents who live on the Abbottsmoor estate in Port Talbot
are locked into paying unjustified and extortionate ground rent
fees and charges for poor maintenance. Will the Secretary of
State commit to strengthening the Leasehold and Freehold Reform
Bill by ensuring that all leaseholders have the right to vary
their lease, setting ground rents to a peppercorn, ensuring that
premiums are as cheap as possible, regulating managing agents,
and abolishing forfeiture?
Michael Gove
I always listen with respect to arguments made by a Kinnock, and
in this case, I think the hon. Gentleman is broadly—broadly—in
the right territory.
Greg Smith (Buckingham) (Con)
What steps are being taken to ensure that planning authorities
and, more importantly, the Planning Inspectorate are utilising
the powers in the new NPPF to protect land use in food
production?
Michael Gove
The NPPF could not be clearer about chief executive of the
Planning Inspectorate is very aware of how important it is to
ensure that there is public confidence in the NPPF.
Imran Hussain (Bradford East) (Lab)
My constituency has some of the highest levels of health
inequalities in the country, which have been further increased by
the cost of living crisis and the continual cuts to our council
budgets. If the Government are serious about levelling up, why
was Bradford East's bid to reduce health inequalities knocked
back?
Michael Gove
The Labour leadership in Bradford Council must look to its
performance. I think there is a distinction to be drawn between
the Labour leaderships in Leeds and in Bradford—Bradford could
learn a lot from what Leeds has done. This is not a party
political point; it is a point about failure specifically in
Bradford.
Tom Hunt (Ipswich) (Con)
My constituents have significant concerns about crime and
antisocial behaviour in the town centre. Public space protection
orders can play an important role, but the local Labour council
refuses to use the powers it has. We have groups of men drinking
alcohol in the middle of the town centre, and the council does
nothing. Does the Secretary of State agree that, yet again,
Ipswich Labour should step up?
Michael Gove
It is sad, but not surprising, that Labour in Ipswich has failed
again. That is why it is so important that people vote
Conservative at the police and crime commissioner elections on 2
May. There are few more effective scourges of crime than the
Conservative police and crime commissioner, Tim Passmore, and my
hon. Friend, who does such a brilliant job in Ipswich.
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