The Independent

Cameron banks on Thatcher’s legacy

Tory manifesto says 1.3 million families in social housing will be able to buy their own homes in echo of predecesso­r’s right-to-buy revolution

- ANDREW GRICE POLITICAL EDITOR

David Cameron will try today to extend the Conservati­ves’ appeal and transform their image as the “party of the rich” by promising to allow 1.3 million families in social housing to buy their homes.

Launching the Tories’ election manifesto, the Prime Minister will claim that they are “the party of working people” as he pledges to extend to housing associatio­n tenants Margaret Thatcher’s landmark policy to allow council tenants to buy their homes at huge discounts.

The new giveaway would be funded by forcing local authoritie­s to sell off their most expensive housing when it becomes vacant to raise £4.5bn a year. Although some experts worry that the social housing stock would be reduced by extending the right to buy, the Tories insist they would ensure “one-for- one replacemen­t”. A Tory government would ensure that councils built 400,000 new homes over five years through a £1bn new fund to unlock brownfield land. Local authoritie­s would submit projects to clean up derelict or contaminat­ed sites.

After failing to break through in the opinion polls, the Tories will use their manifesto to reach out beyond their core vote by appealing to lowincome groups. They may try to

outflank Labour on the national minimum wage, which Ed Miliband pledged yesterday to raise to more than £8 an hour by 2019. The Tories have already said they would ensure that workers on the minimum wage would not pay income tax by 2020, by raising the personal tax allowance to £12,500 by then. But they may go further today.

After criticism that the Tory campaign lacks passion, Mr Cameron will invoke the memory of Thatcher by saying that extending the right to buy would mean “a new generation [being] given the security of a home of their own”.

“So this generation of Conservati­ves can proudly say it: the dream of a property-owning democracy is alive – and we will fulfil it.” He will add: “We are the party of working people, offering you security at every stage of your life.”

Under the existing scheme, people who have been council tenants for more than five years can buy their home. Tenants in houses get a 35 per cent discount, increasing by 1 per cent for every extra year they have been a public sector tenant. Tenants in flats get a 50 per cent discount, rising by 2 per cent every year. Discounts for houses and flats are currently capped at the lower rate of 70 per cent or £102,700 in London and £77,000 in the rest of England.

About 800,000 housing associatio­n tenants have a limited “right to acquire” but the maximum discount is between £9,000 to £16,000, so most cannot afford to buy and sales are low.

Local authoritie­s would be ordered to sell off their properties that rank among the most expensive third of all homes of that type in their area – the calculatio­n would include the value of private housing – and replace them with new affordable housing. But this would happen only as they fall vacant and nobody would be forced to move.

More than 210,000 local authority properties meet these criteria – 5.2 per cent of all affordable housing in England. About 15,000 homes would be sold each year.

Ruth Davison, director of policy and external affairs at the National Housing Federa- tion, said: “We fully support the aspiration of home ownership, but extending the right to buy to housing associatio­ns is the wrong solution to our housing crisis.

“Following 40 years of successive government­s’ failure to build the homes the country needs, soaring rents and house prices and the biggest baby boom since the 1950s … ensuring that there are enough homes today and tomorrow must be our top priority.”

She added: “These are people already living in good, secure homes on some of the country’s cheapest rents. It won’t help the millions of people in private rented homes who are desperate to buy but have no hope of doing so, nor the three million adult children living with their parents because they can’t afford to rent or buy.

“To use their taxes to gift as much as £100, 000 to someone already living in a good quality home is deeply unfair.”

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 ?? GETTY ?? David Cameron in Alnwick, Northumber­land, yesterday. He will say the Tories offer the security of a home of one’s own
GETTY David Cameron in Alnwick, Northumber­land, yesterday. He will say the Tories offer the security of a home of one’s own

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