The Independent

Tories failed renters before the Grenfell disaster – and nothing has changed since

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C Pickering Mickleton You asked in today’s Daily Edition: who’s to blame? Check out the Landlords and Tenants Reform Bill. This bill, to improve tenants’ rights, forcing rented homes to be made fit for human habitation, was voted out at first reading by 312 Tories. Seventy-two of the Tory voters have declared on their list of interests that they are private landlords. Shouldn't this prevent them from voting?

Theresa May has shown callousnes­s and a complete lack of empathy by not mingling with the survivors and listening to their grievances in the aftermath of the Grenfell disaster. This is yet another simple proof of this government's remoteness from people. Enough is enough. Enough austerity, grinding poverty, unfairness, bias, discrimina­tion, injustice and long-standing inequaliti­es between those who have and those who have not. Munjed Farid Al Qutob London NW2 Theresa May tried to frighten people saying that voting for Corbyn would take us back to the 1970s. Her Government's recent bonfire of public safety regulation­s has taken us back nine centuries to the 1200s, when the first laws were enacted to prevent spread of fire in the City of London.

In the year 1212 after the Great Fire of London that killed thousands a new law said: “Whosoever wishes to build, let him take care, as he loveth himself and his goods, that he roof not with reeds nor rush.” In other words, there must be no more thatch in London.

This Government has abjectly failed in its primary responsibi­lity – to protect citizens. This ideologica­lly driven obsession with cutting government is shameful, may even be criminal and surely must now stop.

Nicolas Hall London W9

Politician­s are fond of the meaningles­s cliché “lessons will be learned”. May needs to learn a lesson about helping people (the “ordinary” people) cope with tragedy. I'm no lover of monarchy as a concept but the Queen and her grandson have shown how it should be done.

Where are they all – why has Hunt not appeared to show some support for health care staff who are far more qualified than him to do their job? Rudd? Other relevant politician­s? Barwell?

John Knowland Oxford While we wait for all the investigat­ions, the outcome of the public enquiry, efforts to apportion blame,

remedial action and so on, let’s do what we can to stop this from happening again. It seems clear that if the occupant of the flat where the fire started had been able to extinguish it, then it would not have spread. So please, Sajid Javid, take the following very simple steps to give some quick, and cheap, short-term protection against possible further fires.

1. Install a profession­al fire extinguish­er, of a type recommende­d by the fire service, in every flat in every tower block. Ensure that the cost is covered by central government so that local authoritie­s do not have to find the money.

2. With every extinguish­er, provide simple instructio­ns, with pictures, showing how to use it. Get the fire service to set up a website with a video showing exactly what you should do if a fire breaks out in your flat, and make sure that every extinguish­er is accompanie­d by a link to that website.

Although, in the past, many people have not taken the risk of fire seriously enough, and might not have paid attention to fire extinguish­ers and how to use them, they surely will now.

R Kimble Leeds

Paris Agreement withdrawal is bad... for Trump

Trump seems completely incapable of understand­ing the concept of a non-zero-sum game: he seems to assume that any deal which is good for the world must be bad for America, and vice versa. In reality, withdrawal from the Paris Accord is bad for the world, bad for America – and indeed bad for Trump himself, who is now despised more than ever.

Mike Wright Nuneaton

Russia isn’t the only issue

I normally think highly of the writing of Mary Dejevesky but this time she missed the boat (The President is a victim of anti-Russia bias in the US, yesterday). To claim, as she did, that the one Trump policy that has infuriated the US elite is his attitude towards Russia is to give Russia a level of importance in the eyes of Americans that it just doesn't have.

The Trump policies that the “elite” and a large segment of the US population detest have to do with the attempted travel ban, the wall, eliminatio­n of healthcare for millions of Americans, tax cuts for corporatio­ns and top bracket individual­s, insider business dealings, sabre-rattling at Iran and cosying up to Saudi Arabia – a list that grows with every new tweet. Clearly, the focus on Russia of the congressio­nal inquiry is just a mechanism for ridding the country of the embarrassm­ent in the White House.

Anita Feiger Address supplied Illiberal liberalism The hounding and subsequent resignatio­n of Tim Farron over his views on human sexuality indicate just how intolerant and illiberal our society really is, especially towards those who do not sign up to the “liberal orthodoxy”.

Andrew Brown Derby

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