The perfect fumble
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 3 Jun 2012
- Messages
- 26,063
Well for a start the final article is largely asking the housing minister to build up not on new land. He implemented a policy on that only weeks ago to much acclaim so effectively did what he was being asked to do in the final article. This was heavily publicised. Not much more needs to be said on that one.
The first article is saying nothing more than we need more homes - we are building more than we have in a generation. Homes England are also building and developing directly by partnering up with developers which again is what is called for in the article. Nothing else needs to be said on it.
The middle article is superseded as significant new funds to the tune of 9 billion have been allocated for new home building.
The 3 articles are extremely limited in content and fact.
I could list tens of jobs in Manchester alone funded by the Manchester devolution housing fund. The two huge ones at the entrance to deansgate being the most evident. The housing fund is also being diverted under the stewarship of Andy burnham to build significant affordable housing in suburbia. 300 million of devolution money recycled 5 times will mean a 1.5 billion housing fund is working in Manchester as we speak.
On top of this I requote Sajid Javids full speech. This sums up what he has achieved in this role.
https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/sajid-javids-speech-on-the-housing-market
I suggest you read the full speech - it really does show the quality intelligence empathy and commitment of the man.
Once you have read it could you be so kind as to say where you think he may be going wrong? And what would you or let’s say dianne the toilet cleaner (or any other menial job) Abbott do better than a self made millionaire intellectual son of an immigrant bus driver? (From Rochdale I might add!)
I apologise for posting this 15 minutes ahead of my 10 pm deadline.
And this will solve the housing crisis how? Governments, even inept and duplicitous ones like this one will do stuff, spend billions here and there, but to what end? What is the scale of the project, what targets are being set (we know Tories love targets). How many houses are being built, year on year, and by whom and at what cost, for what demographic, over what period of time? What finite period are we looking at when we can say that the housing crises has been solved? And what extra expenditure is being pumped in (peanuts, by the look of it given the scale of the problem).
I've read Javid's speech, tinkering and warm words, it lacks the vision and the boldness and yes the money to achieve anything of significance, typical seen to be doing something, vacuous bullshit.
You need to take a look at the post war house building programme mate and compare and contrast, then sit in a darkened room with a bottle of whisky and weep.