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 Post subject: Maggies Dream is back
PostPosted: Tue Apr 14, 2015 9:57 am 
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-the-papers-32296114


Interested in the different opinions of MT. If the tories had any chance of gaining extra votes in Scotland this association would dash it....i hope!

Personally i'd have a day of celebration every year on April the 8th :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 14, 2015 4:06 pm 
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Artur and molshy wrote:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-the-papers-32296114


Interested in the different opinions of MT. If the tories had any chance of gaining extra votes in Scotland this association would dash it....i hope!

Personally i'd have a day of celebration every year on April the 8th :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:


Me too mush an absolutely detestable slag :evil: :evil:

The Tory's are dead meat =D> =D> =D> =D> =D>

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 14, 2015 4:30 pm 
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Housing associations say they'll sue if the Tories force them to sell off homes under right-to-buy

The policy could face a legal challenge arguing it breaches property rights enshrined in human rights law
Jon Stone

Tuesday 14 April 2015


Housing associations set to be crippled by Conservative plans to extend the right-to-buy policy will launch a legal challenge against the move, they have said.

The Tories announced today that they will force housing associations to sell off homes at a fraction of their value despite warnings that the policy could cause the not-for-profits to go bankrupt.

Tony Stacey, chair of a group of 100 housing associations and chief executive of South Yorkshire Housing Association, told trade publication Inside Housing when the policy was first mooted in March that he would “definitely” launch a challenge.

“I would definitely challenge it legally. This is so fundamentally critical to us. It would shoot up to the top of our risk map if it was confirmed. We are duty bound morally to fight it in any way we possibly can,” the Placeshapers chair told the publication.

Other housing association chief executives are quoted as saying they “would be surprised” if a legal challenge did not happen because the policy would risk the viability of the entire social housing sector.

Because housing associations are private not-for-profit businesses, forcing the sale of homes at below market value could potentially breach Article 1, Protocol 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which gives everyone the “right to the peaceful enjoyment of one’s possessions”.

Industry sources also say charity law would have to be changed to accommodate the move because charities, including many housing associations, are generally prohibited from selling off their assets at below market value.

Today’s move by the Conservatives was criticised by both the Chartered Institute of Housing and the National Housing Federation, which represent housing associations and the industry at large.

Ruth Davison, the Federation’s policy director, said: “We fully support the aspiration of homeownership but extending 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 enough homes today and tomorrow must be our nation’s top priority.”


A spokesperson for the Federation said they would need to see the detail of the policy before they could say whether they would support a legal challenge.

CIH deputy chief executive Gavin Smart said he feared “the figures simply won’t stack up” for the extension.

“Right-to-buy has already had a huge impact on the supply of genuinely affordable homes, which is being cut at a time when more and more people are in need. The next government should be reviewing the way the policy currently works, not extending it,” he argued.

David Cameron officially announced the policy in a speech today, arguing that it could benefit 1.3 million families and turn Britain into a “property-owning democracy”.

“We are the party of working people, offering you security at every stage of your life,” he said.

John Healey, a former Labour housing minister, described the policy as a “cheap Thatcher tribute act” and said it would worsen Britain’s housing shortage.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/po ... 75492.html

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 16, 2015 7:50 am 
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Labour's queen of hypocrisy: MP who sneered at white van man now attacks Tory right-to-buy plan - even though she bought a £1million housing association home which she rents out


Emily Thornberry has criticised Conservative 'right-to-buy' policy


Family bought housing association property for £572,000 in 2007


Three-storey property in north London now worth almost £1million




A senior Labour politician was under fire last night for attacking right to buy – while renting out a property she bought from a housing association.

Emily Thornberry has come out against David Cameron’s pledge to extend the right to buy policy from council tenants to those in housing association homes.

But eight years ago she and her husband bought at auction a housing association property now worth almost £1million.

Tories said Miss Thornberry, who lost her frontbench job after tweeting a sneering picture of a house covered in England flags and with a white van outside, opposed right to buy but not ‘right to buy to let’.

‘This hypocrisy goes right to the heart of Ed Miliband’s Islington-based, out-of-touch Labour Party,’ said Henry Smith, who is seeking re-election as Conservative MP for Crawley.

‘They speak out against plans that help the aspirations of hardworking people on days when it’s politically useful.’

Housing association chiefs have also been accused of hypocrisy for drawing huge salaries and living in mansions while wishing to deny tenants a foot on the property ladder.

Ruth Davison, of the National Housing Federation, which represents housing associations, has a£1million home in fashionable Islington, north London.

Miss Thornberry yesterday retweeted an article from the federation attacking right to buy.

And, in a question-and-answer session last week, the Labour candidate for Islington South and Finsbury criticised the policy directly.

She said: ‘I don’t have a problem per se with people being able to buy their council flat or council house, so long as it is replaced like for like.

'And that’s what the problem has been. There has been a massive sell-off but they have not been replaced.’

Council house tenants in England can already buy their home at a discount of up to £103,900.

The Tories would extend this to 800,000 housing association tenants who now have limited purchase rights and to 500,000 who have no rights at all. Around 2.7million people live in these properties.

The subsidies would be funded by making councils sell their more costly properties when they become vacant. Each would be replaced on a one-for-one basis.

The picture that cost Miss Thornberry her job as shadow attorney general was taken during the Rochester by-election, which was won by Ukip.

The case highlighted just how much high-value property Miss Thornberry owned.

She lives with her husband, high court judge Sir Christopher Nugee, in a four-storey Victorian townhouse on an exclusive crescent in Barnsbury, north London, worth almost £3million.

Miss Thornberry also owns a £600,000 flat in Guildford, Surrey, which she bought for her mother in 2000.

In March 2007, her husband bought the housing association property in Finsbury at auction for £572,000.

The three-storey townhouse was bought from Ujima, a housing association catering largely for ethnic minority tenants, which went bust just months later. It is now let.

The fact a housing association sells a property does not necessarily mean social housing stock has fallen. They could use the cash to build in a cheaper area.

During part of her childhood, Miss Thornberry lived in a council house. At the age of seven, her parents divorced and she and her two younger brothers moved into social housing with their mother.

Labour politicians continued to attack the right to buy extension yesterday. David Lammy, a potential London mayoral candidate, tweeted: ‘Extending right to buy is one of the most senseless and irresponsible pledges ever made by a British political party.’

Last night a YouGov poll for the Policy Exchange think-tank suggested 50 per cent back extended right to buy.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... z3XS6oP919



Housing fat cat who hates right to buy is a Labour supporter with £1m home



The leading critic of Conservative Party plans to give housing association tenants a right to buy herself lives in a £1million house.

As director of policy and external affairs at the National Housing Federation, Ruth Davison has been leading the campaign to prevent millions of people getting a real chance of owning their own homes.

But just as she did not advertise the fact that she is a member of her local Labour party in Islington, North London, neither has she revealed just how comfortable her own house is.

In reality she has been one of the country’s biggest gainers from the private property boom. She also earned hefty salaries in public bodies for years when Labour was in power.

Miss Davison, 44, and husband Chris Bailey, 47, who describes himself as an ‘urban regenerator, non-profit board member and social entrepreneur’, bought a large terrace house in Islington for £440,000 ten years ago. It has now rocketed to more than £1million in value.

Yet on behalf of the fat-cat housing association bosses she speaks for, Miss Davison has been across the newspapers and broadcasters this week fighting to stop the Conservative election campaign proposal to extend ‘right to buy’ legislation from council house tenants to the 2.7million people living in housing association properties.

Under the scheme, housing association tenants would receive discounts of tens of thousands of pounds on the market value of their homes.

Miss Davison told the BBC in response to the Tory right-to-buy plans on Tuesday that it was wrong to effectively give money to ‘some of the most securely housed people in the country on some of the lowest rents’.

She added: ‘We are independent organisations and charities – you can no more force a housing association to sell their assets at less than they’re worth than you can force Tesco, or even Cancer Research. So housing associations would have to be fully recompensed for any sale. There will be a cost to the taxpayer.’

Miss Davison’s first major taxpayer-funded role under Labour was at the Audit Commission, with other senior roles at Bedford and Hertfordshire Strategic Health Authority and the National Patient Safety Agency.

Last night Miss Davison said: ‘The price of a family house is now beyond the reach of many – I couldn’t afford to buy my home now.

‘We need to build more homes of all types to make housing more affordable for everyone, not just give money away to the lucky few.’


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... z3XS7tk8Ea


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 16, 2015 10:44 am 
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Joined: Wed May 23, 2012 7:24 pm
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captain cab wrote:
Labour's queen of hypocrisy: MP who sneered at white van man now attacks Tory right-to-buy plan - even though she bought a £1million housing association home which she rents out


Emily Thornberry has criticised Conservative 'right-to-buy' policy


Family bought housing association property for £572,000 in 2007


Three-storey property in north London now worth almost £1million




A senior Labour politician was under fire last night for attacking right to buy – while renting out a property she bought from a housing association.

Emily Thornberry has come out against David Cameron’s pledge to extend the right to buy policy from council tenants to those in housing association homes.

But eight years ago she and her husband bought at auction a housing association property now worth almost £1million.

Tories said Miss Thornberry, who lost her frontbench job after tweeting a sneering picture of a house covered in England flags and with a white van outside, opposed right to buy but not ‘right to buy to let’.

‘This hypocrisy goes right to the heart of Ed Miliband’s Islington-based, out-of-touch Labour Party,’ said Henry Smith, who is seeking re-election as Conservative MP for Crawley.

‘They speak out against plans that help the aspirations of hardworking people on days when it’s politically useful.’

Housing association chiefs have also been accused of hypocrisy for drawing huge salaries and living in mansions while wishing to deny tenants a foot on the property ladder.

Ruth Davison, of the National Housing Federation, which represents housing associations, has a£1million home in fashionable Islington, north London.

Miss Thornberry yesterday retweeted an article from the federation attacking right to buy.

And, in a question-and-answer session last week, the Labour candidate for Islington South and Finsbury criticised the policy directly.

She said: ‘I don’t have a problem per se with people being able to buy their council flat or council house, so long as it is replaced like for like.

'And that’s what the problem has been. There has been a massive sell-off but they have not been replaced.’

Council house tenants in England can already buy their home at a discount of up to £103,900.

The Tories would extend this to 800,000 housing association tenants who now have limited purchase rights and to 500,000 who have no rights at all. Around 2.7million people live in these properties.

The subsidies would be funded by making councils sell their more costly properties when they become vacant. Each would be replaced on a one-for-one basis.

The picture that cost Miss Thornberry her job as shadow attorney general was taken during the Rochester by-election, which was won by Ukip.

The case highlighted just how much high-value property Miss Thornberry owned.

She lives with her husband, high court judge Sir Christopher Nugee, in a four-storey Victorian townhouse on an exclusive crescent in Barnsbury, north London, worth almost £3million.

Miss Thornberry also owns a £600,000 flat in Guildford, Surrey, which she bought for her mother in 2000.

In March 2007, her husband bought the housing association property in Finsbury at auction for £572,000.

The three-storey townhouse was bought from Ujima, a housing association catering largely for ethnic minority tenants, which went bust just months later. It is now let.

The fact a housing association sells a property does not necessarily mean social housing stock has fallen. They could use the cash to build in a cheaper area.

During part of her childhood, Miss Thornberry lived in a council house. At the age of seven, her parents divorced and she and her two younger brothers moved into social housing with their mother.

Labour politicians continued to attack the right to buy extension yesterday. David Lammy, a potential London mayoral candidate, tweeted: ‘Extending right to buy is one of the most senseless and irresponsible pledges ever made by a British political party.’

Last night a YouGov poll for the Policy Exchange think-tank suggested 50 per cent back extended right to buy.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... z3XS6oP919



Housing fat cat who hates right to buy is a Labour supporter with £1m home



The leading critic of Conservative Party plans to give housing association tenants a right to buy herself lives in a £1million house.

As director of policy and external affairs at the National Housing Federation, Ruth Davison has been leading the campaign to prevent millions of people getting a real chance of owning their own homes.

But just as she did not advertise the fact that she is a member of her local Labour party in Islington, North London, neither has she revealed just how comfortable her own house is.

In reality she has been one of the country’s biggest gainers from the private property boom. She also earned hefty salaries in public bodies for years when Labour was in power.

Miss Davison, 44, and husband Chris Bailey, 47, who describes himself as an ‘urban regenerator, non-profit board member and social entrepreneur’, bought a large terrace house in Islington for £440,000 ten years ago. It has now rocketed to more than £1million in value.

Yet on behalf of the fat-cat housing association bosses she speaks for, Miss Davison has been across the newspapers and broadcasters this week fighting to stop the Conservative election campaign proposal to extend ‘right to buy’ legislation from council house tenants to the 2.7million people living in housing association properties.

Under the scheme, housing association tenants would receive discounts of tens of thousands of pounds on the market value of their homes.

Miss Davison told the BBC in response to the Tory right-to-buy plans on Tuesday that it was wrong to effectively give money to ‘some of the most securely housed people in the country on some of the lowest rents’.

She added: ‘We are independent organisations and charities – you can no more force a housing association to sell their assets at less than they’re worth than you can force Tesco, or even Cancer Research. So housing associations would have to be fully recompensed for any sale. There will be a cost to the taxpayer.’

Miss Davison’s first major taxpayer-funded role under Labour was at the Audit Commission, with other senior roles at Bedford and Hertfordshire Strategic Health Authority and the National Patient Safety Agency.

Last night Miss Davison said: ‘The price of a family house is now beyond the reach of many – I couldn’t afford to buy my home now.

‘We need to build more homes of all types to make housing more affordable for everyone, not just give money away to the lucky few.’


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... z3XS7tk8Ea

TYPICAL OF THE RIGHT WING SCUM THAT HAS INFILTRATED SOME SECTIONS OF THE LABOUR PARTY .................WERE ON THIS SLAGS CASE

THAT GIVEN THE POLICY ADVOCATED BY THE VERMIN IS DISGUSTING AND WILL NOT HAPPEN :badgrin:


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I AM PROUD TO BE A CITIZEN NOBODY'S SUBJECT http://www.republic.org.u

F88K EM ALL WHAT GOES AROUND COMES AROUND

BOOZE BOOZE BOOZE


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 16, 2015 11:31 am 
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Quote:
TYPICAL OF THE RIGHT WING SCUM THAT HAS INFILTRATED SOME SECTIONS OF THE LABOUR PARTY .................WERE ON THIS SLAGS CASE

THAT GIVEN THE POLICY ADVOCATED BY THE VERMIN IS DISGUSTING AND WILL NOT HAPPEN :badgrin:


I agree =D>

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