489. Musk’s AI Deepfake Disgrace & JD Vance’s Minnesota Lies (Question Time)
15 January 2026
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11 November 2010
3 minute(s) read
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Can you shed any light as to why Labour didn’t reverse the Tory policy of preventing councils using “Right To Buy” money to build more council homes? I honestly thought that would have been a priority from day one.
Good discussion on benefits reform on radio five earlier. Housing kept coming up from the public but you are right that it does not really resonate as a major political issue and it should. I agree that the sense of health and education being communal may make a difference. IDS did not sound convincing but equally a lot of people have bought the line that the unemployed are workshy and people are better off on benefits
Thanks for coming to the conference and for the very frank way you spelled out what you saw as our challenges, and the advice you gave on dealing with government. It was interesting that as you were speaking the students were on the rampage and I think perhaps the coalition needs to wake up to the anger people feel that a lot of these changes are not needed and that they do not need to cut so much so quickly. Good luck
Interesting blog AC. I would tend to agree with the comments of the woman from the National Housing Federation, although I don’t think some people look at it in that way. Some people view a roof over their heads as a god given right, for want of a better expression. They have no respect for the roof over their heads, because they don’t own it and therefore treat it accordingly. Hence the number of run-down council estates and the problems that go with that sort of mentality. Personally, my home is the most important thing in the world to me, along with husband and family of course. In fact I would rate housing/home above health and education in the scheme of things. I’ve been fortunate in life in all 3 of those necessities but am very mindful of those people who haven’t been as fortunate, which is why Shelter and other similar charity organisations are my favourite charities.
Another thing that strikes me regarding all these benefit cuts is this, leaving aside the immorality of it for a moment, is it a good idea to be cutting police numbers at the same time as taking away the money of the most vulnerable and dependent members of society? Violent crime, robberies and demonstrations will soar at an alarming rate, I would imagine and where will the police be? There’s not going to be enough of them to enforce the law if the ConDems get their way!
I am that woman from the National Housing Federation, and also valued your presentation. The article I mentioned as the source of my comments is here
http://www.insidehousing.co.uk/analysis/opinion/swept-aside/6512184.article
Oh, and in view of your blog post will we see Housing added alongside Health and Education in your Categories list on the right? 😉
Today at work I will try to help a gorgeous 7 year old. She is a lovely girl – clearly very well loved and looked after. And as bright as you can be. But her biggest challenge is that she shares not just a bedroom, but a bed with her mum and two brothers. She tells me she ofter goes to sleep on the lounge floor so her brothers don’t kick her. I’ve seen the flat. It has one tiny lounge and kitchen, one tiny bedroom and a tiny bathroom. For four of them. Mum has not claimed for social housing, or a whole load of other benefits. Social services don’t seem that bothered. There is no garden, she has no toys, no books, no space to do her homework. It makes me angry to the point of implosion.
I wish to make two points
a) how can her private landlord be allowed to accept her rent, knowing as he does the conditions she is living in. He also owns a local business. One that I will never go back to. How he can look in the mirror is beyond me.
b) CUTS CUTS BLOODY CUTS. THE COST TO SOCIETY OF THIS POVERTY IS MUCH HIGHER IN EMOTIONAL AND FINANCIAL TERMS THAN PROVIDING THE ADEQUATE HOUSING AND SUPPORT.
I am working with this family, providing a level of support that is shortly being removed due to the cuts. I could, if given time, make a huge change to them. As it is I have to leave then to it. It breaks my heart and makes me livid in equal measure.
Wow you really did add Housing to your categories! Fantastic.
I don’t often say this but I agree with Alastair 100 per cent about the need to get housing further up the agenda. The failure of successive governments to put an adequate housing framework in place has stoked boom and bust and led to totally unjustifiable redistribution of paper wealth towards those who were fortunate enough to get on the ladder before prices sky-rocketed, without any commensurate improvement in the housing stock. It’s the prime example of a nation that has been living beyond its means – not just the government but individuals too.
We need to build more homes – but that’s not the end of the story. We need to get a proper planning framework which means that the right sort of houses are built in the right sort of places to support people’s lives rather than some sort of bucolic idyll. And it needs to be linked in with transport and schools and hospitals. As thing stand, there’s too much nimbyism and too much pulling up of ladders and it’s time it stopped.
It was a great presentation and everyone found your top ten tips valuable. Thanks for being so obliging by chatting to everyone and signing books.