Angela Rayner is facing increasing pressure from local authorities to address a £2.2 billion financial shortfall, which could lead her to reconsider or potentially abolish the Right to Buy scheme that enabled her to purchase her own council home.
Housing Secretary Angela Rayner is contemplating the potential abolition of the Right to Buy scheme, which enabled her to purchase her own council home. This consideration comes amid mounting pressure from local authorities to address a £2.2 billion financial shortfall.
Rayner is anticipated to initiate a consultation on the future of the Right to Buy scheme, originally introduced by Margaret Thatcher in 1980. According to The Telegraph, the Deputy Prime Minister recently attended an ‘urgent meeting’ with local authorities to discuss housing reforms, although specific policies were not detailed.
The Right to Buy scheme enabled tenants of council houses to purchase their homes from local authorities at significantly discounted rates.
Angela Rayner personally benefited from this scheme, acquiring her former council house in Stockport, Manchester, for £79,000, which represented a 25% discount.
Angela Rayner later sold the property for nearly £50,000 more than her purchase price.
This potential policy shift comes amid calls from over 100 local authorities for the Right to Buy scheme to be discontinued for new council houses. A report commissioned by Southwark Council highlights that the policy has created a £2.2 billion deficit in local authority finances and exacerbated the housing crisis. It argues that the scheme has significantly underestimated maintenance costs and has been negatively impacted by changing government policies and economic fluctuations, posing a serious threat to the sustainability of England’s council housing.
Shadow Housing Minister Kemi Badenoch criticized the move, suggesting that Labour’s intent to dismantle a key Thatcher-era policy is not coincidental. She argued that if Angela Rayner were truly committed to improving living conditions, she would focus on increasing housebuilding rather than cutting a program that helps people secure homeownership and invest in their communities.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has also promised to overhaul planning regulations as part of Labour’s agenda to ‘rebuild Britain,’ condemning the current planning system as outdated and inefficient. In her early speeches as Chancellor, Reeves emphasized the need for a decisive change in planning rules to accelerate important projects and stimulate economic growth.