Housing Debate

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Andrew Griffiths

Main Page: Andrew Griffiths (Conservative - Burton)
Tuesday 15th December 2015

(8 years, 4 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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John Healey Portrait John Healey
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The statistic that matters most is the number of homes that were actually built. The hon. Gentleman is right to say that 2009 saw the lowest level of house building under 13 years of Labour, but that figure was still higher than that in the best year in the past five years of a Tory Government.

There have been five years of failure on every front, by every measure and in every area. Two weeks ago, the Prime Minister gave a speech in which housing was a central theme. He said—I am not making this up—that

“this is a government that delivers”.

Well, it does not deliver on housing. The Government spent the last five years blaming Labour, but they have their own track record now—and it is one of five years of failure on housing under Conservative Ministers.

The Chancellor gave his autumn statement and spending review three weeks ago and, again, housing was a central theme.

John Healey Portrait John Healey
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That is exactly what the Chancellor said:

“We’re doubling the money for housing to build 400,000 new affordable homes”.

After the Chancellor’s autumn statement, the Government’s annual investment in housing will be £1.7 billion. Under the money inherited in 2010 from Labour, it was £3.1 billion. That is not an increase, but a cut—it is not a doubling, but a halving—of vital investment in housing in our country for our people.