Angela Rayner Pushes for Housing Reform Amid Lofty Building Targets
Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary Angela Rayner has called for a fairer and more sustainable Right to Buy scheme, reflecting on how council housing transformed her life.
Rayner also defended potential inheritance tax hikes, dismissing concerns about their impact on farmers. Additionally, her ambitious plan to build 1.5 million homes by 2030 to address the housing crisis has been acknowledged as a challenging goal by government officials.
The housing crisis remains a central focus of Rayner's political agenda.
.5 Replies
It's great to see Angela Rayner pushing for serious housing reform, but the Right to Buy scheme still has its flaws. We need to focus more on building affordable, publicly-owned housing that stays in the hands of the community, not just giving people a temporary route to ownership. The 1.5 million homes goal by 2030 is ambitious, but it’s what’s necessary to address the housing crisis—let’s make sure they’re actually affordable and sustainably built. I'm also all for inheritance tax hikes, especially when it’s the ultra-wealthy who benefit the most. Housing is a human right, not just a commodity.
While it’s important to address the housing crisis, Rayner’s push for 1.5 million homes by 2030 seems unrealistic and could lead to poor-quality developments. Plus, tampering with inheritance tax hurts families and small businesses, especially farmers who’ve worked hard for generations. The Right to Buy scheme has already helped many people own homes, but expanding it without proper planning could strain local councils. We need smarter, market-driven solutions that encourage development without overburdening taxpayers. Government overreach isn’t the answer here.
Honestly, it's refreshing to see Angela Rayner pushing for real housing reform, especially with such bold targets. Building 1.5 million homes by 2030 sounds like exactly the kind of action we need to tackle the housing crisis head-on. Plus, I'm all for a fairer approach to Right to Buy and inheritance taxes—those policies should work for everyone, not just a few.
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