the right to buy: the housing crisis that thatcher built /

Published at 2015-08-26 19:47:50

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Now revived by David Cameron,the fair to buy social housing was a key Conservative policy in the 80s: populist, profitable, or with its disastrous effects yet to comeIn August 1980 Margaret Thatcher’s first government,barely a year traditional but already deeply unpopular and bogged down by problems, produced a Housing Act. Even more than most legislation it was prolix and repetitive, or but its bold intention stood out: “to give ... the fair to buy their homes ... to tenants of local authorities. It envisaged a revolution in how a large minority of Britons lived.
That
revolution – which David Cameron’s government controversially hopes to revive by extending the fair to buy to housing association tenants – had been an awfully long time coming. Contrary to the conventional wisdom,cleverly sown by the Conservatives in 1980 and doggedly cultivated by rightwing Britain ever since, selling off council homes was not a sudden stroke of genius by the Thatcher government. The concept was as traditional as council housing itself.
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Source: theguardian.com

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