UK TimesUK Times
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
What's Hot

A12 northbound within J30 | Northbound | Road Works

29 January 2026
New footage shows extent of Tottenham star’s £400,000 Ferrari crash – after Randal Kolo Muani was left stranded by tyre blowout

New footage shows extent of Tottenham star’s £400,000 Ferrari crash – after Randal Kolo Muani was left stranded by tyre blowout

29 January 2026
Betting on politics is the new game: More than 0M on wagers increases fears of insider trading – UK Times

Betting on politics is the new game: More than $200M on wagers increases fears of insider trading – UK Times

29 January 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
UK TimesUK Times
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
UK TimesUK Times
Home » Starmer faces fury as promise to clamp down on damp and mouldy homes pushed back to 2035 – UK Times
News

Starmer faces fury as promise to clamp down on damp and mouldy homes pushed back to 2035 – UK Times

By uk-times.com28 January 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Starmer faces fury as promise to clamp down on damp and mouldy homes pushed back to 2035 – UK Times
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Sign up to our free Brexit newsletter for our analysis of the continuing impact of Brexit on the UK

Sign up to our free newsletter for the latest analysis on Brexit’s impact

Sign up to our free newsletter for the latest analysis on Brexit’s impact

Brexit and beyond

Labour MPs and renters’ rights campaigners have reacted with fury after Keir Starmer watered down his flagship plan to force landlords to provide decent homes.

The government has announced that decent homes standards – that require landlords in England to provide homes in a reasonable state of repair and be free of damp and mould – will now not be enforced until 2035, in what Labour MPs are describing as a “betrayal” of its manifesto promise.

It comes after another pledge – to scrap ground rents for leaseholders – has also been watered down, with a cap set at £250 instead.

The delay means Labour would need to win the next two general elections to oversee the implementation of the manifesto promise while in government.

Veteran Labour MP Barry Gardiner told The Independent: “This is shocking. I thought this was supposed to be the year of delivery, not having to wait a decade.”

Leeds Labour MP Richard Burgon added: “This means the decent homes standards will basically probably never happen.”

(Getty Images)

Labour’s former shadow chancellor John McDonnell told The Independent that the delay risks indicating to voters that the party “stands for leaving children in slum accommodation”.

“I argued recently that one of the problems facing Labour was that people simply didn’t know what Labour stands for and who Labour stands for,” he said.

“From this announcement, many will decide that Labour stands for leaving children in slum accommodation and for landlords.”

The government’s decision to give landlords until 2035 to implement a decent homes standard in their properties was met with fury from campaigners and charities, who condemned it as “outrageous”.

The government’s decision to give landlords until 2035 to implement a decent homes standard in their properties was met with fury from campaigners and charities

The government’s decision to give landlords until 2035 to implement a decent homes standard in their properties was met with fury from campaigners and charities (PA)

“It’s outrageous that millions of renters are stuck paying hand over fist for often shoddy homes that pose a real danger to their health,” Sarah Elliott, Chief Executive of Shelter, said.

“Now, to add insult to injury, renters are being asked to wait almost an entire decade for the basic protection of a decent home.

She added: “Let’s be clear, renters simply can’t wait this long for decent homes. Building on the vital changes in the Renters’ Rights Act, the government must ensure renters’ homes are safe to live in now, not in 2035, while supporting councils to bring rule-breakers to book by properly funding local authority enforcement teams.”

(Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire)

Labour MP Olivia Blake said: “Renters – as a minimum – should expect the homes they live in to be fit for human habitation. The Renters’ Rights Act is a landmark piece of legislation which rightly addresses the power imbalance between landlords and tenants, and I was proud to support it. Leaving millions of renters in this postion for a further decade not only let’s landlords off the hook, but isn’t the ambition Labour should be aspiring to.”

Generation Rent said: “The government has today announced that many private renters will have to wait a DECADE before their landlords will be forced to make sure their home is decent.”

The campaign group’s chief executive Ben Twomey added: “It is absurd to let landlords drag their feet for an entire decade, denying renters the most basic standards in our homes.

“It will mean millions of renters, including children, trapped in poor-quality homes with nowhere to turn.”

The government issued a response to its consultation on the decent homes standard on Wednesday, with the minister for housing and planning, Matthew Pennycook, saying “social and private landlords should act as quickly as possible to ensure their properties are decent”.

However, he added that the government recognises the “significant challenges that landlords are facing” as a result of the changes and said: “As such, we have decided that all rented properties will be required to meet the new DHS by 2035 at the latest – an implementation timeline that gives social landlords in particular the time and the certainty they need to boost housing supply as well as drive up the quality of the homes they manage.”

The delay means Labour would need to win the next two general elections if they were to see the implementation of the manifesto promise while in government

The delay means Labour would need to win the next two general elections if they were to see the implementation of the manifesto promise while in government (PA Wire)

The watered-down reforms come after The Independent reported last year that some 83 MPs earn a minimum of £10,000 from renting properties, with Labour leading the pack of mostly residential landlords.

Labour was warned that the government won’t be trusted on renters’ rights after it emerged that MPs rake in at least £830,000 a year in rent.

Campaigners said the number of landlords in parliament was “shocking” and called for greater scrutiny over what they described as a “blatant conflict of interest” when voting on legislation that would directly affect them.

High-profile ministerial landlords include chancellor Rachel Reeves and foreign secretary David Lammy. Ms Reeves moved to Downing Street following her new role in government.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related News

A12 northbound within J30 | Northbound | Road Works

29 January 2026
Betting on politics is the new game: More than 0M on wagers increases fears of insider trading – UK Times

Betting on politics is the new game: More than $200M on wagers increases fears of insider trading – UK Times

29 January 2026

A12 southbound between J33 and J32B | Southbound | Road Works

29 January 2026
Assisted dying supporters consider rare move to bypass Lords block – UK Times

Assisted dying supporters consider rare move to bypass Lords block – UK Times

29 January 2026

M6 northbound within J17 | Northbound | Road Works

29 January 2026

M25 anti-clockwise at the Cobham services between J10 and J9 | Anti-Clockwise | Congestion

29 January 2026
Top News

A12 northbound within J30 | Northbound | Road Works

29 January 2026
New footage shows extent of Tottenham star’s £400,000 Ferrari crash – after Randal Kolo Muani was left stranded by tyre blowout

New footage shows extent of Tottenham star’s £400,000 Ferrari crash – after Randal Kolo Muani was left stranded by tyre blowout

29 January 2026
Betting on politics is the new game: More than 0M on wagers increases fears of insider trading – UK Times

Betting on politics is the new game: More than $200M on wagers increases fears of insider trading – UK Times

29 January 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest UK news and updates directly to your inbox.

© 2026 UK Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version