Lords slammed as 'self-interested' for blocking Renters’ Rights Bill

Lords slammed as ‘self-interested’ for blocking Renters’ Rights Bill

Houses of Parliment and the River Thams, Renters' Rights Bill
12:03 AM, 15th April 2025, 12 months ago 35

Tenant organisations, including Shelter, have slammed ‘self-interested landlords in the House of Lords’ for delaying the Renters’ Rights Bill.

According to the i newspaper, 10 peers who have tabled amendments to the Bill, including keeping fixed-term tenancies, are landlords themselves.

The news comes after senior figures within the Conservative Party have allegedly engaged in confidential discussions with landlords to derail the government’s Bill.

Allow fixed-term tenancies to continue

In research shared with the i newspaper, the Renters’ Reform Coalition reveals nearly one in five (162) sitting peers in the House of Lords are landlords, with more than 100 having financial interests in property and lettings.

The i claims at least 10 of the peers tabling amendments that advance the interests of landlords are landlords.

Despite critics claiming the amendments “advance the interests of landlords”, the amendments also help tenants.

Lord Strasburger, Lord Carrington, and Lord Jamieson, who are landlords, have tabled amendments to allow fixed-term tenancies to continue, which they say “certain groups rely on.”

In the student rental market, fixed-term tenancies are vital as they give security to tenants and landlords.

If fixed-term tenancies are abolished, landlords would have no guarantee that their flats would be available to rent at the start of the academic year, which would also cause chaos for students.

Amendment to help smaller landlords still issue Section 21 notices

Lord Hacking, another landlord and Labour peer, has proposed that renters should pay their landlords’ legal costs if they challenge a rent increase and are unsuccessful.

Lord Jackson of Peterborough, who is also a landlord, has tabled an amendment which would allow smaller landlords with five or fewer properties to still be able to issue Section 21 notices.

The Renters’ Rights Bill aims to abolish Section 21 notices as soon as the Bill becomes law.

His amendment says: “Many smaller landlords are less likely to have the capacity to fund legal proceedings.”

The Earl of Kinnoull, a Conservative peer who receives rent from cottages, has proposed reductions to fines for landlords limits the local housing authority’s power to impose a financial penalty of £40,000 to £7,000.

The peer has also tabled an amendment for a introduce a new option of a landlord pet damage deposit.

Another of his amendments would make it harder for landlords to be fined by courts if they discriminate against tenants on benefits or with children.

Help landlords regain possession

Lord Carter of Halesmere has tabled amendments to help landlords regain possession.

Under the Bill, the threshold for rent arrears would increase from two to three months before a landlord could enforce repossession by serving notice.

However, one of the amendments, proposed by Lord Carter of Haslemere, keeps the existing two-month threshold in place when the Bill comes into force.

The second amendment would allow landlords to continue using rent arrears caused by delays in universal credit payments as a ground for possession.

Other Lord members who are also landlords include Lord Truscott who has tabled an amendment to still allow a tenant to pay up to 12 months of rent in advance, if mutually agreed with the landlord.

The Earl of Leicester and the Lord Bishop of Manchester also have landlord interests.

Renters’ Rights Bill is deeply flawed

Mairi MacRae, director of campaigns and policy at Shelter, told the i newspaper that the government must not be swayed by “self-interested landlords”.

She told the i newspaper: “It beggars belief that a handful of self-interested landlords in the House of Lords are cooking up cynical schemes designed to bring the progress of the Renters’ Rights Bill to a standstill.

“Renting reform is too important and too urgent to be held hostage by vested interests.

“If the government is serious about making renting more secure and affordable, it must resist this last-ditch attempt to weaken the Bill.”

The Renters’ Reform Coalition and tenant organisation ACORN echoed Shelter’s thoughts and claimed to the i newspaper “these Lords to stop playing political games with the lives and wellbeing of renters.”

However, as the Conservative party points out, the Renters’ Rights Bill will cause unintended consequences for the private rented sector and lead to a reduction in supply.

A Conservative party spokesperson told the i: “We have been warning that the bill is deeply flawed and will lead to a reduced supply of rental homes, which will increase the cost of renting and affect young people.”


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Comments

  • Member Since November 2019 - Comments: 150

    10:14 AM, 15th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    The Renters Rights Bill ,

    Will Give the Tenants a Right to be Homeless.

    People who have been living quite happily for the last decade or more with their Private Landlord are being made homeless because the Landlord is being forced by the Governments policies.

    They have a massive shock because there is nothing to rent .

  • Member Since February 2015 - Comments: 33

    11:05 AM, 15th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    The charities Shelter and Acorn don’t supply housing at all so why do they think they know best? Let’s have a few more views from landlords who know what the business is all about.

  • Member Since April 2018 - Comments: 365

    11:13 AM, 15th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Ma’at Housing Solutions at 15/04/2025 – 10:13
    As I am sure there are many landlord’s who could speak of horrific tenants. Hopefully the Lord’s will stall this unbalanced bill forever as they certainly haven’t gone far enough yet with their proposals.

  • Member Since November 2023 - Comments: 20

    12:04 PM, 15th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    I really dont understand why any Tenant would want to opt for a Periodic rather than fixed term Tenancy
    Every last one of my Tenants were more than happy to sign 3+ year fixed term / fixed rate agreements
    Surely Periodic leaves them constantly vulnerable to eviction and annual rent rises or am i missing something?

  • Member Since May 2014 - Comments: 617

    12:29 PM, 15th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by MPD at 15/04/2025 – 12:04
    I disagree having a periodic tenancy gives tenants all the advantages.

    There will be no need for tenants to sign a 3 year contract because the property provider will no longer be at liberty to use a section 21 notice when he needs to have the property back.

    There will be very few avenues open to us to get the property back and most if not all of them will not be mandatory grounds.
    Where is the justice?

  • Member Since April 2023 - Comments: 88

    12:29 PM, 15th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by David at 15/04/2025 – 11:13Indeed.
    I wonder how many private landlords were part of the consultations for this Bill?
    In fact how many private tenants rather than simply tenant-centric organizations were consulted?
    As one who supports both landlords and tenants to ensure both are knowledgeable of their respective tenant and landlord statutory responsibilities and to mediate when things go awry,
    I am cognizant of there being bad tenants as well as bad landlords.
    It is never simply either or.
    The persistent failures of government ministers to work collaboratively with both sectors as opposed to alienating them by enacting punitive regulations ie 2010’s DWP/ housing benefit reforms; the numerous statutory regulations for landlords which in the last decade according to the NRLA has seen an increase of 40% plus whilst ignoring the fact that there is already sufficient legislation to protect both landlords AND tenants but it is actually LOCAL AUTHORITIES who are the biggest culprits due to persistently failing to take necessary enforcement action when called for.
    Government should stop their deliberate alienation and conflict-inducing strategies of landlords and tenants as both parties suffer at the hands of incompetent councils!

  • Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1574

    2:12 PM, 15th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Stella at 15/04/2025 – 12:29
    If a landlord wants their property back, there is almost always a reason.

    To live it in themselves, to let to a family member or to sell up are all perfectly reasonable Section 8 (No Fault) Notices of Intended Possession.

    Right now, selling up is the No 1 reason for a Section 21.

  • Member Since May 2014 - Comments: 617

    2:36 PM, 15th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 15/04/2025 – 14:12
    We will have to see what this final RRB looks like.
    I do not believe a word this government says because they are so anti private landlord.

    I

  • Member Since April 2020 - Comments: 95

    3:02 PM, 15th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 15/04/2025 – 14:12
    Yes, it is so why can’t they see it themselves and listen to experienced landlords with some wisdom. As has been said many times before no landlord wants to evict good tenants, Section 21 evictions have been going on and become more apparent because of all this. They just want to trap us into providing houses for bad tenants who will play the system like mad so thank good ness someone is speaking up for us.

  • Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1574

    3:31 PM, 15th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by DP at 15/04/2025 – 15:02
    I think they want us to sell in order to rake in £Billions through a tax on inflation (CGT). The former tenants become buyers and fall into the SDLT trap whenever they move home.

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