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Rayner declares war on developers who don't build homes with major rules change
Rayner declares war on developers who don't build homes with major rules change

Daily Mirror

time24-05-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Mirror

Rayner declares war on developers who don't build homes with major rules change

Deputy PM Angela Rayner vowed to 'hold their feet to the fire' to get homes built with planned new powers for councils as the Government battles to fix the housing crisis Fat cat developers who fail to build promised homes could have their land seized or face fines. Councils will be given new powers to take control of developments left gathering dust to ramp up pressure to get homes built. ‌ Developers who leave sites unfinished for years or get planning permission just to sell the land to the highest bidder will also be forced to pay hefty fines to local authorities per unbuilt home, based on the council tax that would have been paid. ‌ And offenders could be blocked from getting future planning permissions, under the new plans. For the first time, housebuilders will also have to commit to deadlines before they get planning permission, and keep town halls updated each year on their progress. Deputy PM Angela Rayner vowed to "hold their feet to the fire" to get homes built as the Government battles to fix the housing crisis. She told the Sunday Mirror: "We're saying to developers - we will not have stalled sites. We're going to hold their feet to the fire. "As part of that planning process they have to tell councils what their plan is of how many houses will be built in a year, and their progress on where they're getting with that, and making sure that there are penalties if they don't keep up with that." Large housing sites, producing over 2,000 homes, can take at least 14 years to build, locking families out of owning their own homes or being able to rent affordably. But progress can be much quicker if more than 40% of the homes are affordable, according to the Minister of Housing and Local Government (MHCLG). ‌ Officials are considering whether to make mixed sites the default requirement to fire up housebuilding. Fixing the planning progress and making it harder to block developments is critical to the success of the Government's plans to build 1.5million new homes in England by the end of this Parliament. Councils have already been handed mandatory housing targets and planning rules have been drawn up to make it easier to get spade in the ground. But questions have been raised about the Government's ability to meet the target - which would mean building an average of 300,000 homes a year. Asked if she was confident of meeting it, Ms Rayner said: "It's a stretch target. We always knew it was a really challenging target to meet, but we're absolutely determined to meet it. And the developers and the councils, they say it's hard, but they don't say it's unachievable either." ‌ Ms Rayner added: "There's a lot we've done already to really ramp up house building, but what we inherited was the system that was going backwards and a previous government that was more focused on the vested interests on their benches than the vested interests of the British public." The new Planning Reform working paper will be published today(SUN) alongside a consultation on the proposals. ‌ Shelter said urgent action was needed to tackle rising homelessness and help families stuck on social housing waiting lists. Alicia Walker, assistant director of advocacy and activism, said: "It's good to see the Government getting tougher on private developers. "With 1.3 million households waiting for a social home and homelessness continuing to climb, we urgently need new homes built at speed. Developers drag their heels when building new homes to keep prices high and make bigger profits - often dodging their responsibility to build social housing altogether. "Meanwhile, thousands of families who are bearing the brunt of the housing emergency, homeless in temporary accommodation or crushed by skyrocketing rents, cannot afford to wait." ‌ 'Driving down child poverty is absolutely a priority' Angela Rayner has insisted reducing child poverty is a top priority - despite delays to the Government's flagship strategy to pull kids out of hardship. Keir Starmer appointed a task force last summer to draw up plans to tackle the scourge of child poverty. But it emerged this week that publication had been delayed until the autumn amid rising tensions over whether to scrap the Tory two-child benefit limit. ‌ The policy, introduced by George Osborne, restricts parents from claiming Universal Credit or Child Tax Credits for any children beyond their first two. The PM is believed to want the option to scrap the policy on the table as he sees it as a personal mission to reduce child poverty by the next election. On reducing child poverty, Ms Rayner told the Sunday Mirror: "It's absolutely a priority of ours." She said the government was considering all the evidence, when asked if the two child benefit cap could be scrapped. Ms Rayner added: "One of the ways in which we can eliminate child poverty is by having parents being able to go to work. I grew up in a family that was a workless family, and I grew up in poverty and it's no fun. ‌ "What we need to do is create good jobs where people have access to them and people have the housing they need. And that's where we're focused, is trying to actually eliminate child poverty by giving opportunities, and making sure that people have good lives." 'We don't need 'slogan politics' to take on Farage' Angela Rayner said Labour must face down the disillusionment gripping voters amid fears of the surge in popularity for Reform UK. Asked on the threat facing the party from the right-wing outfit, she said: "My main worry is not a particular political opponent. ‌ "My main worry is the disillusionment of people who feel that politics doesn't work for them." She said Labour was elected on the promise of change but warned there was no "quick fix" to the problems facing the country. "You've got to do the hard yards, and that's what we've been doing in the first 12 months," she said, pointing to workers rights reforms, public services, housing and trade deals with India, the US and the EU. She added: "These are really structurally foundational issues which will pay off and that's what I want to see the government doing. It's not a political opponent issue. It's about regaining the trust of the British public that says politics is a force for good." ‌ Ms Rayner declared Labour can take the fight to Nigel Farage as "we're rolling up our sleeves and doing the hard yards". She said: "We're not doing back of a billboard or slogan politics here. We're rolling up our sleeves and doing the hard yards. "There's no easy fix. There's no two/three word slogan that's going to get you through the challenges our country faces. "But we've got the optimism to know that our best years are ahead of us if we've got a government that matches the ambition of the British people."

Why Kennedy's Health Reforms Shine in Trump's Honeymoon, With Bigger Wins Ahead
Why Kennedy's Health Reforms Shine in Trump's Honeymoon, With Bigger Wins Ahead

Epoch Times

time29-04-2025

  • Health
  • Epoch Times

Why Kennedy's Health Reforms Shine in Trump's Honeymoon, With Bigger Wins Ahead

Commentary The first 100 days of a presidency, known as the honeymoon period, are a high-stakes sprint. Armed with an electoral mandate, President Trump holds immense political capital to drive his agenda through executive orders, regulatory reforms, and legislative pushes. As we approach the 100-day mark on April 30, Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is capitalizing on this window with bold moves—reorganizing HHS, tackling harmful food dyes, and probing autism's rise. These actions, perfectly timed, set the stage for transformative mid- and long-term reforms. As the former Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health in Trump's first administration, I see Kennedy's strategy as a masterclass in political timing, with even greater victories on the horizon. Mastering the Honeymoon's Leverage Trump's slim but unified Congress—53 Senate seats and a House majority—gives Kennedy a rare window to act decisively before 2026 mid-terms risk flipping power. His April actions show he understands this. His reorganization of HHS into the Administration for a Healthy America (AHA), consolidating HR and policy, streamlines a $1.7 trillion bureaucracy before June budget hearings. These executive and personnel moves, paired with FDA Commissioner Marty Makary's April 10 ban on biopharma insiders in advisory roles, cement Kennedy's short-term wins while the administration's mandate is strong. Navigating Political Realities A president's four-year term hinges on two congressional sessions, and history shows mid-terms often punish the ruling party—Trump lost the House in 2018. Kennedy's team knows that failing to deliver risks voter backlash, especially with activist judges using nationwide injunctions to stall reforms. By acting now, before summer recesses and 2026 campaigns, Kennedy maximizes Trump's current control of the executive and legislative branches. His April 16 press conference on autism's rise (one in 31 kids), including a push for environmental toxin studies, keeps HHS in the spotlight. This short-term focus via executive authority builds momentum for complex regulatory and legislative battles ahead. Mid- and Long-Term Horizons Regulatory and legislative approaches, which take longer, are Kennedy's next frontier. Four priorities stand out: Dietary Guidelines Overhaul: Secretary Kennedy's Southwest tour, launched April 4, celebrated Utah and Arizona's bans on school food dyes and SNAP soda purchases. Updating federal dietary guidelines with the USDA, expected by fall 2025, will combat obesity (40 percent of adults) and chronic diseases, building on state momentum. Family Planning Reform: The first Trump administration's Title X rules, separating abortion providers like Planned Parenthood from federal funds, saved millions. Kennedy is poised to reinstate similar regulations by early 2026, aligning with pro-life voters before midterms. mRNA Vaccine Review: Reports suggest HHS may pull mRNA COVID vaccines from childhood schedules, reflecting public skepticism. A regulatory review, likely starting this summer, could redefine vaccine policy. Budget and Structural Reform: Kennedy will work with Congress to strengthen AHA, NIH, FDA, and CDC reforms, capitalizing on DOGE's cuts to propose a leaner HHS budget in 2026, ensuring long-term efficiency. Why Timing Matters Kennedy's first-100-day blitz—executive orders, personnel shifts, and state partnerships—exploits the honeymoon's political capital. By acting before mid-term politicking and judicial roadblocks intensify, he's laying a foundation for durable change. His nutritional focus resonates broadly, avoiding the 60 percent disapproval Michelle Obama faced on school lunches by emphasizing choice. If Secretary Kennedy builds on these wins, delivering regulatory and legislative victories by 2026, Republicans will carry a powerful health message into mid-terms, potentially retaining Congress. It will take more than two years to begin to restore trust in an agency that lost a significant amount of it during the COVID pandemic. But, at this pace, it is clear that even though President Trump and Secretary Kennedy's actions have been impactful, the best is yet to come. Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

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