The Independent

From housing to police, the Tories have decimated local services – enough is enough

- ANDREW GWYNNE

After eight years of austerity from the Tories it’s clear that the Government has abandoned local communitie­s to fend for themselves.

House building has crashed to its lowest levels since the 1920s and more and more people are becoming homeless or going into temporary accommodat­ion. The safety of our communitie­s has been put at risk after cuts of over 20,000 police officers, and older people are not living with the dignity and comfort they deserve because of cuts to social care.

These cuts are deeply unfair – local councils with the greatest needs have been hit hardest. People have had enough of cuts to vital services that are hurting our local communitie­s, and of failed privatisat­ions that suck funds out of public services so a few can make a profit.

In Northampto­nshire, things have got so bad that the county council has completely collapsed. The Conservati­ve leader of Surrey County Council, which covers the Chancellor Philip Hammond’s own constituen­cy, said: “We’re facing the most difficult financial crisis in our history. The Government cannot stand idly by when Rome burns.”

When your children’s school is losing teachers and forced to send letters asking for money to pay for pens and pencils, or their youth centre is closed, that’s because the Conservati­ve priority is tax breaks for big business.

And when your elderly relatives are neglected because of a lack of social care, remember that the Conservati­ves have given billions in tax giveaways for a few people at the top.

Contrary to the spin, struggling taxpayers now face rising council tax bills because of the Conservati­ves’ cuts. The message from Theresa May could not be clearer: pay more for less under the Conservati­ves.

But local elections are coming up on 3 May, and communitie­s have the opportunit­y to vote for change. On housing, the Labour Party will build 100,000 genuinely affordable homes to rent and buy each year by the end of the next Parliament, including the biggest council house building programme in more than 30 years.

On social care, it will put £8bn in over the next Parliament plus £1bn in the first year to ease the immediate crisis and bring relief to families suffering across the country as a result of Tory underfundi­ng.

And on policing, it plans to recruit 10,000 new police officers to keep communitie­s safe.

Communitie­s can and should send a message to the Government on the 3 May that they have had enough of Tory cuts.

Andrew Gwynne is Shadow Secretary of State for Communitie­s and Local Government

 ??  ?? Crisis point: homebuildi­ng is at its lowest level in a century (Getty)
Crisis point: homebuildi­ng is at its lowest level in a century (Getty)

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