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UK Homelessness Minister 'evicted tenants and hiked rent to £4k a month'

UK Homelessness Minister 'evicted tenants and hiked rent to £4k a month'

The National11 hours ago
Homelessness Minister Rushanara Ali kicked out four tenants from her townhouse near the Olympic Park before re-advertising the same four-bedroom property at an increased price, according to an investigation by the i newspaper.
The MP for Bethnal Green and Stepney has previously been vocal on renters' rights and has spoken out against 'private renters being exploited".
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Under Labour's Renters' Rights Bill, the Government plans to bring the private rented sector within the minimum standard set for social housing, and would ban landlords who end a tenancy to sell a property from re-listing it for six months.
According to the i, a source close to Ali said the tenants had been informed their tenancy would not be renewed by email and were instead offered a rolling contract.
They were reportedly told the rolling contract was necessary as the property was put up for sale.
Tenant Laura Jackson, a self-employed restaurant owner and one of four people who rented the property, told the paper: 'It's an absolute joke. Trying to get that much money from renters is extortion'.
At the time of ending the tenants' contract, the firms which managed the property also attempted to charge Ali's tenants nearly £2000 for the house to be repainted and £395 for professional cleaning.
Under the Tenant Fees Act 2019, landlords are prohibited from charging their tenants for professional cleaning, and are prohibited from charging tenants to repaint a home unless serious damage has occurred.
Jackson said: 'It was really stressful. It was so much money – nearly £500 each! The property was not clean when we moved in; it was ridiculous and unfair.'
The fees were dropped once Jackson told the agencies they knew their landlord was a Labour MP, she said.
'If we hadn't known the charges were unlawful, we would have had to pay them. It's exploitative.'
Jackson added: 'I just think it's morally wrong that MPs can be landlords, especially in their own area. It's a conflict of interest.'
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After failing to find a buyer, the house was re-listed for rent at £700 a month more, the paper reports.
A spokesperson said: 'Rushanara takes her responsibilities seriously and complied with all relevant legal requirements.'
Momentum, the network of activists that grew out of Jeremy Corbyn's first Labour leadership election campaign, reacted to the news: "This Government has got its priorities wrong.
"It was quick to suspend four MPs for standing up for disabled people. But when the Cabinet minister for homelessness evicted her tenants to increase rents, it stays silent."
Conservative MP Ben Obese-Jecty said: "Rushanara Ali's position surely cannot be tenable. She must resign."
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A (relatively) quiet recess has been enlivened by a government resignation. Rushanara Ali quit as Homelessness Minister after accusations of hypocrisy by the i newspaper over how she handled rent increases on a house she owns in east London. Ali ended her tenants' fixed term contract to sell up but then re-listed the house for rent at a higher price within six months, which is something she is currently trying to outlaw under the Renters' Rights Bill. She had already lost part of her brief after attending an event linked to the parent company of a firm criticised by the Grenfell inquiry. The Labour MP's resignation came in an exchange of letters with the Prime Minister. She insisted that 'at all times I have followed all relevant legal requirements' – something which ignores the fact that Ali's own department is responsible for the impending law change. Keir Starmer's response is a crisp five paragraphs long, praising Ali's 'diligent work' to repeal the Vagrancy Act and improve democratic participation. It ends with a nod to her constituents in Bethnal Green and Stepney – a seat which Labour will likely lose to a Gaza independent-style candidate next time around. Ali's exit is the eleventh departure from Keir Starmer's government in thirteen months. A playbook has now been established for ministerial exits: go quickly, go quietly and, if you're lucky, you might just come back. Rushanara Ali's resignation came just over 24 hours of the i story first appearing. The exchange of letters dropped after the 6 o'clock news, before tomorrow's papers had gone to press. Clearly, there is little appetite for a rerun of the Tory years, when various doomed ministers desperately tried to cling on, thus prolonging the pain across multiple media cycles. Two thoughts struck me when the news broke. The first is the pragmatic ruthlessness of Keir Starmer's operation. Having purged three Labour rebels on the last day of term in July, Ali's swift execution on Thursday evening was another case of the PM learning from Michael Corleone: 'It's not personal, it's strictly business.' Woe betide any minister caught in trouble; the bodies of Louise Haigh, Tulip Siddiq and now Rushanara Ali show they can expect little sympathy from No. 10. The second was the politics of the Renters Rights' Bill, introduced by Labour after the failure of the Tories to pass a Renters' Reform Bill before July 2024. The criticism of Labour in opposition was that the Conservatives could not enact meaningful change, owing largely to the fact that so many of its MPs were landlords. When it comes to designing and implementing laws, Ali's exit is a reminder of the human interests at play, regardless of which rosettes are won at the despatch box.

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