Labour alleges dirty tricks over digital campaign that described party as ‘anti-landlord’
Labour is calling for an investigation into a third-party Tory campaign to smear its housing policy and in particular, Jeremy Corbyn, during the run-up to the last election.
A website – which has since been taken down – and a Facebook group titled, ‘Right To Rent, Right To Buy, Right To Own’ claimed Corbyn’s policies on the rental market would drive landlords from the sector, meaning less choice for tenants.
They claimed: “Landlords who remain may invest less in their properties in a bid to stay afloat. Under Corbyn’s Labour Party, colossal borrowing will push up interest rates. This will mean higher mortgage payments when you come to buy a home or re-mortgage.”
Lobbyist Jennifer Powers, a former Tory intern, was behind the campaign, and spent more than £65,000 publishing dozens of adverts in 2019.
She told the Mirror she had partly funded them herself and raised money through donations but refused to name the source of her funding. The ads were declared to the Electoral Commission as a ‘third party’, meaning they don’t count towards party spending limits.
MP and former shadow chancellor John McDonnell has told the Commons that the elections watchdog needs to investigate this and other third-party campaigning by pro-Tory groups, who spent a total of £700,000 without declaring any individual donations.
The campaigns all declared they had not received a single donation over the £7,500 threshold for declaring donors to the Electoral Commission.
Website openDemocracy says Right to Rent, Right to Buy, Right to Own bore striking similarities to another supposedly independent third-party campaign, including sending nearly identical emails in response to queries from the Electoral Commission and having remarkably similar privacy policies on their websites.
The Commission has said that it is the legal responsibility of campaigners to ensure that their donations are declared fully.
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Lloyds Bank is latest high street giant to compete with private landlords for tenants
Lloyds Banking Group has announced plans to become a large private landlord, moving its first tenants in by the end of the year.
It aims to buy and rent out new and existing housing stock across the UK as it searches for sources of revenue, according to a report in the Financial Times.
Lloyds, the UK’s largest mortgage lender, hopes to take advantage of its low funding costs, strong brand name and knowledge of the housing market to become a major player in the sector.
As low rates squeeze the profit margins on traditional lending businesses, the move should bring direct benefits through rental yield and house price growth, as well as provide the ability to cross-sell rental deposit loans or insurance.
It’s not first financial institution to get into property; Legal & General is a huge housebuilder, leaser and landlord of private rented property, while retailer John Lewis recently announced plans to build a residential property portfolio to offset weakness in its high street stores.
Track record
Lloyds has also directly invested in several housing projects with smaller developers in recent years through a partnership with Homes England.
It believes the new plan could fit with its stated social objective of ‘helping Britain prosper’ by offering better quality and more professional services to renters than many existing landlords.
In its annual report, Lloyds also announced plans to expand the availability of affordable and quality homes by providing £10 billion of lending to first-time-buyers as well as to assess the energy retrofit requirements of more than 200,000 homes in the social housing sector.
The bank said: “We are committed to broadening access to home ownership and exploring opportunities to increase our support to the UK rental sector.”
Landlords with longer memories may remember that this is not Lloyds’ first foray into renting – during the 1980s it had one of the UK’s largest chains of estate agencies.
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Government’s so-called protection is damaging decent tenants’ prospects
How the Government’s so-called protection for renters is damaging decent tenants’ prospects and leading to empty properties.
Enquiry 1: Hi, I’m John and i work as a sales assistant in Bristol, I would probably want the tenancy to start within the next month and go on for as long as possible really
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LATEST: Labour attacks Sunak’s £545 million ‘landlord giveaway’ in Budget
As many of our readers celebrate the extension of the stamp duty extension announced by Rishi Sunak on Wednesday, Labour has rounded on the Chancellor for ‘giving away half a billion pounds to second home-owners and landlords’.
Its calculation is based on Treasury documents that estimate the stamp duty extension zero-rate stamp duty scheme will cost the government £1.6 billion in lost revenue, and that 34% of sales last year were either buy-to-let properties, residential properties bought by companies or second homes.
On this basis Labour reckons landlords have been given a £545 million tax break by the Chancellor so far via the stamp duty holiday.
This, the party claims, is disappointing because there was no announcement during the Budget of help for the estimated 700,000 tenants who Universal Credit housing payments do not cover their 100% of their rent, or the 500,000 tenants who are in arrears.
Wrong priorities
Thangam Debbonaire MP, Labour’s Shadow Housing Secretary (main pic), says: “The Conservatives have shown once again they have the wrong priorities, giving tax breaks to landlords and second homeowners while failing to tackle runaway house prices and build truly affordable housing.
“After a decade of failure on housing, we needed a Budget that put us on the road to recovery and addressed the fundamental flaws in the housing market. Instead, we got reheated policies with no new ideas on housing.”
As reported in the budget, rather than ending on 31st March, the nil rate of £500,000 will be in place until 30 June 2021 for all purchases regardless of their category.
From 1 July to 30 September, the nil rate will be £250,000, before returning to the standard rate of £125,000 on 1 October 2021.
Labour’s criticism of landlords for being give a stamp duty holiday is not new – it made similar claims when the original zero-rate scheme was announced in July last year.
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End of LIBOR
The FCA has now confirmed that all LIBOR settings will either cease to be provided or no longer be representative:
– Immediately after 31 December 2021, in the case of all sterling, euro, Swiss franc and Japanese yen settings
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Halifax House Price Index – February down 0.1%
The February Halifax House Price index is 0.1% lower on a monthly basis against January, but in the latest quarter (December to February) house prices were 0.5% higher than in the preceding three months.
House prices were 5.2% higher annually than in February last year with the latest UK average property value now £251,697.
The post Halifax House Price Index – February down 0.1% appeared first on Property118.
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Big mistake but I just want my house back?
Hi, I am a landlord for one property, which was my old house. The tenant is refusing to leave with no rent for nearly a year, and we went to court on the 24th of February under a section 8.
The post Big mistake but I just want my house back? appeared first on Property118.
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