Why Southwark Council MUST prosecute Chancellor Rachel Reeves

Why Southwark Council MUST prosecute Chancellor Rachel Reeves

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9:54 AM, 31st October 2025, 6 months ago 16

Another Labour minister is in hot water over ‘misunderstanding’ the rules, and Two Tier thinks landlords will let this latest mishap slide?

Surely, when the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves, breaks housing law, every landlord will sit up and take note.

Reeves has admitted she rented out her Dulwich family home without a selective licence.

Thankfully, the good people at Labour-run Southwark Council have avoided getting into a pickle and say she can apply now and all is good.

But it’s not though, is it? It shows how difficult life as a landlord can be.

And this is in the same week that the abysmal Renters’ Rights Act became law with draconian rules for landlords in England.

£3,200 a month in rent

The story is that Reeves has referred herself to the government’s ethics watchdog after the Daily Mail revealed she didn’t have a selective licence.

It’s being rented out for £3,200 a month (nice work, eh, Rach?) when she moved into Number 11 Downing Street with her family.

The issue is not trivial.

Renting without a required licence in Southwark is a criminal offence under the Housing Act 2004.

If any ordinary landlord had done the same thing, the penalty could be severe: a civil fine of up to £30,000 or an unlimited fine if prosecuted.

Indeed, last year, a local landlord and letting agency were ordered by Southwark Council to pay more than £3,000 for a similar offence.

Labour Councillor Natasha Ennin, Southwark’s cabinet member for community safety, said: “This case demonstrates our commitment to holding landlords and letting agents accountable when they fail to meet their legal obligations.

“Licensing ensures that rented properties in Southwark are safe and well-maintained for our residents. We will continue to take action against those who put tenants at risk.”

Well, we will see how true those words are.

Who was responsible?

Reeves now says that emails show that her letting agent would get the licence.

That’s a charmless way to throw an agent under the bus, and few landlords would ever expect that excuse to hold water.

Every landlord knows that ignorance is no defence.

The selective licensing system was created to ensure homes are safe and properly managed.

The delight at Reeves’ misfortune is that she recently campaigned for a scheme in her own Leeds constituency.

For her to breach those very rules is staggering hypocrisy.

Obligation to follow law

Then we have the Ministerial Code which makes clear that ministers have ‘an overarching duty to comply with the law’.

This is the line that has led to the downfall of the likes of our Ange Rayner and, by her own admission, Reeves has failed to do so.

If her renting out a property without a relevant licence means no censure, then the Code is worthless.

So, if the council is truly committed to equality under the law, it must treat the Chancellor no differently.

That means either prosecuting Reeves under the Housing Act 2004 or issuing the maximum civil penalty – now that would be a new financial black hole, eh Rach?

Anything less would make a mockery of enforcement and undermine faith in the licensing system itself.

Reeves has apologised

Fair play to the Conservatives for grabbing this opportunity but the political response so far has been muted.

It’s always the same when it’s one of their own getting pilloried, isn’t it?

Reeves has apologised to Two Tier and referred herself to the ethics adviser.

Well, that’s all right then.

Smarmer says he has accepted her apology and considers ‘the matter closed’.

He said this after consultation with his independent ethics adviser, which means that advisor must go too.

Yet this situation cannot simply be brushed aside, even if we are weeks out from the Budget.

What did Reeves do?

For those Labour and Reeves supporters asking: ‘What is she guilty of? Not knowing something that you think she should have known?’

The answer is this: She broke the law on being a landlord – you know, the thing that Labour says is a bad thing, and being a Labour MP is no excuse.

Southwark Council must prosecute her for breaking the law and Starmer should sack her.

And she should go onto London’s rogue landlord register – how sweet would that be, eh Sadiq?

Every landlord subjected to licensing knows how unforgiving local authorities can be when licences are missed, even by mistake.

Paperwork errors have cost small landlords thousands.

Beyond the personal scandal, the episode exposes the wider dysfunction of housing regulation.

Ministers have spent years tightening landlord obligations without fully understanding the complexity of property law.

Angela Rayner’s earlier controversy over property tax and Reeves’ breach of licensing rules show how easily even senior politicians can fall foul of the system they helped to create.

Not about politics

But this case is not about party politics; it is about credibility.

If a Chancellor can break housing law and keep her job, what moral authority remains to lecture landlords on compliance?

Put simply, politicians cannot demand integrity from everyone else while they are breaking laws they expect everyone else to follow.

Southwark Council has an opportunity to prove that the law still applies equally.

The outrageous penalties exist for a reason: to deter negligence and ensure accountability.

Whether Reeves faces a civil fine of £30,000 or an unlimited court penalty, anything less would set a dangerous precedent.

Landlords are watching

To allow a cabinet minister to escape meaningful sanction would shatter confidence in the fairness of the system.

This is the truth of the matter: Rachel Reeves broke housing law. She has admitted doing so.

The Ministerial Code says she must obey it, and Southwark Council must now do its job.

The country has had enough of its politicians – mainly Labour, naturally – conveniently forgetting to follow the rules then apologising and getting away with it.

They need to be treated exactly as the electorate would and, in this case, Reeves must be fined.

As Two Tier himself used to say: “It’s one rule for them and another for everyone else.”

Until next time,

The Landlord Crusader


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Comments

  • Member Since September 2015 - Comments: 1013

    10:18 AM, 31st October 2025, About 6 months ago

    Spot on, and we’ll said.

    Sadly, I suspect she she will get away scot-free because this is the way our corrupt Government operates – one rule for them and another for the rest of us.

  • Member Since March 2024 - Comments: 281

    10:39 AM, 31st October 2025, About 6 months ago

    Only someone mis-managing billions with a high ranking pen-pusher husband who had fairly detailed correspondence about not just the need for a SL, but costs, timeframe, what else needed to be put in place first (safety certificates) could then fail to notice there hadn’t been a single word from the agent on SL progress – and almost £1000 hadn’t been charged to them.

    And then come out with the initial “Nobody told us we needed a SL”. Is having a memory like a sieve really what we need in a senior civil servant and someone running the economy? Most people would check back first with old emails and their own notes that any half competent landlord would make and keep on file or spreadsheet (it’s only back to summer 2024 for crying out loud) but not these two – opting for ‘My Truth’ not the truth, to an all too willing Starmer and his ethics adviser to accept that with NO substantiation.

    Just appalling when viewed alongside the ceaseless attacks from politicians on PRS landlords, the vast majority of whom are disgusted to be associated with the image of this half-witted bumbling over the serious business of property letting. It also plays into the hands of councils and the political class that aren’t breaking the rules in highlighting hopeless amateurs as a reason to bring in ever more red tape and regulation.

  • Member Since January 2016 - Comments: 67

    11:18 AM, 31st October 2025, About 6 months ago

    Great article, summed up perfectly. I.e. Southwark Council must prosecute her and issue a RRO for the tenants to get 12 months’ rent back for breaking the law and Starmer should sack her and the so-called ethics adviser, if she doesn’t resign. Both her and the ethic adviser have to go. I will also call on landlords in Southwark to stage mass protest outside the council office this weekend to force this issue to become the needed fait accompli.

  • Member Since August 2016 - Comments: 1190

    11:22 AM, 31st October 2025, About 6 months ago

    “Reeves now says that emails show that her letting agent would get the licence”. So she was completely aware that a licence was required. I understand that only the landlord can apply for a licence not the letting agent. So why the letting would say they’ll obtain the licence when they know damn well they cannot. Sounds to me like the agent has been subject to pressure to cover up for her.

  • Member Since May 2014 - Comments: 89

    12:01 PM, 31st October 2025, About 6 months ago

    People are ignoring that this council give 21 days to apply for a license, once the error has been highlighted. If that’s so she’s off the hook…like any other landlord would be in the same circumstances. We all make mistakes, it’s not like she hasn’t got a lot on her plate already.

  • Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2197 - Articles: 2

    12:28 PM, 31st October 2025, About 6 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Neil P at 31/10/2025 – 12:01
    People in her position cannot expect to make such elementary mistakes and not be penalised for so doing.

  • Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2197 - Articles: 2

    1:00 PM, 31st October 2025, About 6 months ago

    Many have played a negative part in this sad saga.

    Reeves should be sacked immediately. Starmer should resign for supporting her criminal activity. The ethics advisor should be dismissed for his appalling decision to absolve Reeves. Reeve’s husband should be reprimanded for his complacency in not ensuring that she obtained a licence. Southwark councillors should be reprimanded for not taking immediate action against such a high profile transgressor. The letting agent deserves to be sanctioned for the cover-up confession, which was so obviously contrived.

  • Member Since October 2011 - Comments: 139

    2:26 PM, 31st October 2025, About 6 months ago

    I agreed with every word … until “The country has had enough of its politicians – mainly Labour, naturally – conveniently forgetting to follow the rules then apologising and getting away with it.”
    What a short memory the LC must have to have completely written off the 100s of occasions COVID lockdown rules were ‘conveniently forgotten’, not to mention the actual laws that were broken by what was then a Tory government – who apologised (but only after they were caught out) and were seemingly then pretty much off the hook, despite costing the country literally millions of pounds and quite probably a far few thousand lives too.

  • Member Since January 2015 - Comments: 1446 - Articles: 1

    2:50 PM, 31st October 2025, About 6 months ago

    Must be prosecuted as is a strict liability crime ( section 95 of the Housing Act 2004) with unlimited fines, and there is no defence of “I didn’t know” or my letting agent didn’t tell me as she well knows.

    AND she has got to resign. Simple

  • Member Since May 2021 - Comments: 392

    2:58 PM, 31st October 2025, About 6 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Gromit at 31/10/2025 – 10:18
    In a strange way it wouldn’t be such a bad thing for us landlords if she got off with it as I’m sure in the future the case could be used to defend landlords who have made this same ‘oversight’. The council could set a very dangerous precedent by not coming down on her like they would with others.

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