Evictions by bailiffs increase by 50 per cent as cost-of-living crisis bites – Labour Party
New analysis by Labour of Ministry of Justice figures has revealed that evictions from rental properties are at their highest since they were first measured over a decade ago, according to the Labour Party.
- The figures show that in the 12 months to September 2014, there were 41,195 landlord repossessions by county court bailiffs, an increase of 49% on the same 12 month period to Sept 2010. This would have seen an estimated 90,000 tenants lose their home.
- The 11,100 landlord repossessions by county court bailiffs in the latest quarter (3-months to Sept 2014) was also the highest quarterly figure since 2000.
- The number of claims issued for possession by landlords has also risen dramatically by 27% to over 170,000 in the 12 months to September 2014 when compared with the same period to Sept 2010.
Other housing facts:
- The Government has presided over the lowest levels of housebuilding in peacetime since the 1920s.
- The Government’s Bedroom Tax affects over 600,000 social tenants.
- 9 million people, including over 1 million families, now rent from a private landlord.
- Working people are £1,600 a year worse off under David Cameron’s government because for four years wages have lagged behind price rises.
To see what Labour’s shadow housing minister has to say about all this, give the party’s press site a visit.
Follow me on Twitter: @MidWalesMike
Join the Vox Political Facebook page.
Vox Political needs your help!
If you want to support this site
(but don’t want to give your money to advertisers)
you can make a one-off donation here:
Buy Vox Political books so we can continue
bringing you the best of the mainstream media.
Health Warning: Government! is now available
in either print or eBook format here:
The first collection, Strong Words and Hard Times,
is still available in either print or eBook format here:
I notice there is no link to the MOJ statistics referred to by New Labour. Which is odd.
(I would post a direct link to them but I can’t find them.)
Who’s ‘New’ Labour?
I don’t think there’s any reason to doubt them – it’ll be a government statistical series.
I doubt anyone and especially any political party when it comes to “quoting” statistics and not referencing the origin.
The closest I can find is this but it states the opposite to New Labour’s analysis:-
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/374286/mortgage-landlord-possession-statistics-july-september-2014.pdf
Again, who is this ‘New’ Labour you mention? There hasn’t been a New Labour in the UK since 2010.
New labour is as neoliberal today as it was in 2010, Ed Balls is as new labour as you can get, Im an actual socialist, which means I do get annoyed with labour shill blogs like this tryING and say this lot are not.
If it’s as neoliberal today as in 2010, then it wasn’t neoliberal in 2010. Simple as that.
I think there’s a way to go yet before Labour gets its soul back, but it’s a lot closer than it was in the dark days of, say, Tony Blair.
As for this being a Labour ‘shill’ blog – firstly: sticks and stones etc; secondly: you really haven’t read very much of it, have you? I lay into Labour whenever I feel the need. Classic targets are the Work and Pensions representatives, including Liam Byrne in the past and Rachel Reeves more recently. I don’t let anyone off the hook.
Well it isn’t Old Labour.
Nope. It’s just Labour.
It isn’t just Labour either, given the deafening silence from the leadership about serious issues like the Work Capability Assessment, they are New Labour.
You know I think Labour’s social security ideas are in dire need of an overhaul. But that doesn’t mean this is the same neoliberal party that Tony Blair put in government. New Labour does not exist anymore and hasn’t since 2010.
We both agree Labour does not exist.
No we don’t.