15 May 2008 18:39
MOVING his tanks on to Labour's lawn? Slapping his towel down on Gordon Brown's sunbed? However you describe it, the launch of the new Homelessness Foundation looks to be at the heart of David Cameron's bid to shake off the Conservatives' image as the 'nasty' party.
'I'm proud because it's the Conservative Party that is taking the lead in the fight against homelessness,' he said in his speech at the launch event. 'That is saying we can build a fairer society and make a difference to the lives of hundreds of thousands of people in our country.
That's quite a turnaround for a party that gained a reputation in the 1990s for regarding the homeless as something you stepped over on your way to the opera [even though it was a quote taken out of context] and for dismantling the homelessness legislation.
Change one word in Cameron's speech and he would get a standing ovation at the Labour conference: 'I've put tackling poverty at the heart of my mission for the Conservative Party: 'It's just frankly unacceptable that in a society such as ours - one of the richest and most developed in the world - that some people live in truly dire and degrading poverty. I want to give everyone - no matter what their background or their circumstances - the chance to lift themselves up and make the most of their lives. And an important part of that means tackling homelessness - giving everyone the security that a roof over their head brings.'
He attacked the government for fiddling the figures on rough sleeping, ignoring hidden homelessness and failing to do enough about families in temporary and overcrowded accommodation and argued that action had to be taken on the causes as well as the symptoms of homelesness.
Tories often seem to make the right noises about homelessness only to veer off into moralising about marriage and the family. Family breakdown was there in Cameron's speech yesterday but alongside personal debt, prison rehabilitation and recognition of a fourth cause of homelessness that could be the most important for the future. 'And causes like the severe lack of affordable housing in our country. Taken year on year, there's actually been less social housing built in the last decade than in the two decades before.'
It's not exactly a cast-iron commitment to increase, or even maintain, current levels of spending on affordable housing but it is an important marker and a positive sign for a post-Labour world.
Which is why charities like Shelter and Crisis are surely right to welcome the new initiative and keep up the pressure to ensure that actions follow words.
As Inside Housing
reports this week, a Tory housing green paper is due in October. David Cameron could do worse than listen to the Local Government Association and its (Conservative) chairman Sir Simon Milton. The LGA is warning of a 1m increase in waiting lists by 2010 and calling for more freedom for councils to borrow and remortgage assets to reinvest.
Why not go further than the government's plans on freedom from the housing revenue account? 'Tories back council housing' might just have the potential to be the Cameroon equivalent of New Labour scrapping Clause Four.
Posted by Jules Birch, May 16
Posted in Homelessness, Politics