I imagine most people spent last Monday’s sun-drenched evening spilling out of pubs, cold drinks in hand, or sunning themselves in the garden/local park. But there were no such joys for me. Instead I was cooped inside, watching a smattering of peers debate the finer details of the Renters’ Rights Bill.
Now, while a cold pint or an ice cream were certainly tempting, I’m not complaining. The debate that ensued not only showed the cross-party support for limiting rent hikes, but also spoke to a deeper contradiction in Labour’s policy on this issue when compared to its commitment to govern for ‘working people’.
- Landlords are worried about rent controls. Will Labour introduce them to cap record-high rents?
- Renters’ Rights Bill must stop landlords raising rents above wages or inflation, government told
- ‘We are sick and tired’: Hundreds of renters demand ‘rent controls now’ in Christmas protest
The Renters’ Rights Bill is without question a positive first step in addressing the power imbalance between tenants and landlords that has caused a huge range of social problems in recent years. But there is a glaring gap in the legislation in that it does nothing to slam the brakes on soaring rents.
A December 2024 report from Zoopla found that rents for new lets are £270 per month higher than three years ago. Meanwhile, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation’s 2024 UK Poverty Report found more than a third of private renters were in poverty after housing costs.
Peers from across the political spectrum put forward ideas to limit how much landlords can raise the rent. These included capping it at the Bank of England base rate, or wage growth. But the Labour minister Baroness Taylor gave these short shrift, saying: “We have considered rent regulation within the broader context of the private rented sector, and we do not believe that limiting rents in this way leads to positive outcomes.”
Labour MP Bell Ribeiro-Addy then asked a question on rent controls at PMQs on Wednesday, but Keir Starmer dodged it, citing instead the Renters’ Rights Bill and the government’s home building programme.