2 years ago | 8 comments
Today, King Charles will open Parliament and reveal more than 35 Bills to be introduced by the Labour government.
While details are scarce it looks like there is little discussion about what might happen to the private rented sector – despite Labour promising to ban Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions ‘on day one’.
However, the Renters (Reform) Bill (RRB), which was first proposed in 2019, is expected to be back on the table.
The bill aims to improve protections for tenants – including the potential banning of Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions.
There is also a pledge for Awaab’s Law to be extended to the PRS.
Labour insiders also claim that the Speech will propose amendments to the RRB that will give renters the power to challenge ‘unreasonable’ rent increases.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said: “Our work is urgent. There is no time to waste. We are hitting the ground running by bringing forward the laws we will need to rebuild our country for the long-term – and our ambitious, fully costed agenda is the down payment on that change.
“From energy, to planning, to unbreakable fiscal rules, my government is serious about delivering the stability that is going to turbocharge growth that will create wealth in every corner of the UK.”
He added: “The task of national renewal will not be easy, and this is just the down payment on our plans for the next five years, but the legislation set out at the King’s Speech will build on the momentum of our first days in office and make a difference to the lives of working people.”
So far, these Bills are expected to be announced in the King’s Speech:
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2 years ago | 8 comments
2 years ago | 4 comments
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Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1590
10:07 AM, 17th July 2024, About 2 years ago
The Labour Party will encourage more good landlords to sell up when their properties become vacant. The full impact will not be felt immediately but should become apparent in 2 years or so.
Those tenants that can afford to buy will be fine. Those that can’t afford to buy or who choose not to buy, will be stuck in their current homes for longer.
The next generation of would-be private tenants will be homeless.
Member Since August 2015 - Comments: 46
7:21 PM, 17th July 2024, About 2 years ago
Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 17/07/2024 – 10:07
They should be able to move into one of the 1.5 million new homes labour are going to build in the next 5 years. That equates to 821 new homes built every day including weekends , Christmas day bank holidays for the next 5 years. I can’t find anyone to plumb a dishwasher in without waiting 2 months! As usual it all sounds very good but is not deliverable
Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1590
7:37 PM, 17th July 2024, About 2 years ago
Reply to the comment left by robert fisher at 17/07/2024 – 19:21
With a falling birth rate and no ‘target’ for net migration, who needs 1.5 million homes?
JD Vance knows his stuff.
Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 11
6:08 PM, 23rd July 2024, About 2 years ago
Complete madness when there are already empty properties available and they are not looking at why this is happening. It’s concerning with building on greenbelt land and water companies not coping with current sewage problems.