The Socialist

The Socialist 15 November 2007

World economy: bosses' crisis, workers pay

800 attend rally to discuss 'Which way forward for the left in Britain?'


World economy: Bosses' crisis, workers pay

Editorial: Shattering confidence in world economy


Pakistan martial law

German train drivers strike

Release Nigerian students now!


Royal Mail's deal: Not good enough - Vote NO!

Campaigners say: No Post Office closures!


Green activists seek solutions

Aiming to be rich

Review: Handsworth Revolution - Steel Pulse (1978)


Anger on the building sites

Save every Remploy job!

Birmingham council workers fight pay cuts

Cadbury's closure: Workers vote for action

Trade union news in brief


NHS: Step up the struggle against privatisation

Manchester health workers

Tales from the council chamber


Why you should read, write for and sell the socialist


USA: Enthusiastic response to socialist policies

Egypt's workers flex their industrial muscle

Belgium: Fighting attacks on education

 
 
Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

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Tales from the council chamber

COVENTRY'S SOCIALIST councillors nearly got a motion passed through Coventry's Tory majority council. It called for more affordable rented homes in new developments and for greater powers to take over badly managed and empty terraces and re-let them to families to rebuild communities.

Rob Windsor, Coventry Socialist Party councillor

Coventry has sold off all its council homes, despite our opposition and only a narrow approval for a housing sell-off from tenants after they were starved of repairs. A huge demolition programme has increased housing need in the city.

The motion said that the 25% 'affordable housing threshold' developers must meet to obtain planning permission is set too low. 12,000 families are currently registered with the council's lettings scheme. On top of that, higher interest rates and other factors in the housing market are closing off the possibility of home ownership to wider layers of society.

Our modest proposal was that 40% of all new developments should comprise affordable social housing. We also called for the city council to "recycle" vacant local housing, in order to avoid unnecessary building on Coventry's green belt or the swallowing up of green and park land in city centres.

Our motion called for extra central government housing finance to be allocated to the city and for discussions with government to introduce council powers to take over and re-let badly managed privately rented housing or empty properties.

Surprisingly, New Labour supported us but the Liberal councillor voted with the Tories. The New Labour lord mayor has to use his casting vote to support the largest party. New Labour brought in this clause to the council's constitution but under Tory control, it has now been used against them. The vote was tied 22-22 but with the mayor backing the Tories, our motion fell.

The Tory deputy leader pleaded with New Labour not to return to the "old days" and to think how developers coming into the city would react to having to increase the amount of rented homes in their developments. Obviously, they don't care about the city's working class and young people who haven't a hope in hell of getting a toe on the "property ladder."

The major parties' abandonment of council housing has had catastrophic results. But our very modest motion shows that one major party, who believed the false mantra of "we need more executive housing," now finds that more decent rented homes are needed.

Their response however, is ideologically limited by relying on private developers who hold the purse strings and ultimately call the shots.

The need for a new workers' party with a bold call for building and recycling really affordable rented homes grows bigger each day.


In this issue

800 attend rally to discuss 'Which way forward for the left in Britain?'


Socialist Party Marxist analysis

World economy: Bosses' crisis, workers pay

Editorial: Shattering confidence in world economy


International socialist news

Pakistan martial law

German train drivers strike

Release Nigerian students now!


Royal Mail

Royal Mail's deal: Not good enough - Vote NO!

Campaigners say: No Post Office closures!


Socialist Party news and analysis

Green activists seek solutions

Aiming to be rich

Review: Handsworth Revolution - Steel Pulse (1978)


Workplace news and analysis

Anger on the building sites

Save every Remploy job!

Birmingham council workers fight pay cuts

Cadbury's closure: Workers vote for action

Trade union news in brief


Socialist Party NHS campaign

NHS: Step up the struggle against privatisation

Manchester health workers

Tales from the council chamber


the socialist newspaper

Why you should read, write for and sell the socialist


International socialist news and analysis

USA: Enthusiastic response to socialist policies

Egypt's workers flex their industrial muscle

Belgium: Fighting attacks on education


 

Home   |   The Socialist 15 November 2007   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Housing:

triangleAnti-bedroom tax federation launched in Merseyside

triangleOne Housing

triangleAxe the killer tax: End the bedroom tax now

triangleTax bankers not bedrooms!

triangleScottish Anti-Bedroom Tax Federation launched

Coventry:

triangleCoventry Against The Bedroom Tax - Bekir's Story

triangleThem & Us

triangleLondon & Coventry: NUT lobbies

triangleMarching against cuts in Coventry