The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,749 contributions

Speeches by Pennycook.

Every Hansard contribution by Matthew Pennycook this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

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DateDebate & contributionWords
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Fourth sitting)

I completely understand the hon. Gentleman’s point, but let me give him a bit more insight into my thinking. I recognise his point that there are incentives that operate in both directions. There is no wholly perfect, win-win solution. We have taken this decision partly because it was in our manifesto to protect renter

housing
644
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Fourth sitting)

If the hon. Gentleman would allow me to develop my argument after his intervention, I am sure I will get to his points.

housing
23
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Fourth sitting)

What I would say to the hon. Gentleman—I will expand upon my argument in due course—is that I think he underestimates how difficult it is to take a case to the tribunal. That is why we are seeing such low numbers of tenants going to the tribunal. It is an onerous process; we need to provide support and guidance about h

housing
366
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Fourth sitting)

Clause 8 amends section 14 of the Housing Act 1988, and the amended sections set out the circumstances in which a tenant can submit an application to the tribunal to challenge the rent amount either in the first six months of a tenancy or following a section 13 rent increase notice. Amendments 50 to 53 seek to alter th

housing
187
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Fourth sitting)

It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Dame Caroline. I just thought I would offer a few more thoughts to try to further reassure the hon. Gentleman. As I made clear, we absolutely share his objective of limiting unreasonable within-tenancy rent increases, not least given the potential for that type of rent h

housing
431
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

The Bill will empower private rented sector tenants to challenge unreasonable rent increases. This will prevent unscrupulous landlords using rent increases to evict their tenants—a form of section 21 by the back door. Clause 7 amends section 13 of the Housing Act 1988 to achieve this. It provides that all rent increase

housing
1,057
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

Clause 6 provides for regulations that will allow the Secretary of State to publish the form to be used when landlords serve notice of intention to begin possession proceedings. It is crucial that the information landlords are required to provide reflects current law. This gives tenants the best opportunity to enforce

housing
109
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

It is always better to resolve issues without resorting to eviction, but we recognise that when tenants are committing antisocial behaviour and it is impacting on neighbours, housemates and communities, it is sometimes necessary. In these cases, landlords need to have confidence that they can gain possession of their p

housing
319
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

I thank the hon. Gentleman for that reasonable question. He and many others in the House have significant concerns about the impact of excessive concentrations of short-term and holiday lets in particular parts of the country. A landlord who has moved a family member back in under the mandatory grounds that he cites wo

housing
164
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

I beg the indulgence of the Committee to spend a little time setting out the Government’s position on this schedule, because it is a key part of the Bill. As we have discussed, the Bill reforms the grounds for possession to ensure that tenants have greater security in their homes and, importantly, that good landlords c

housing
261
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

Amendment 61 seeks to expand the discretionary antisocial behaviour ground to include behaviour “capable” of causing nuisance or annoyance. Members may recall that this was proposed in the previous Government’s Renters (Reform) Bill. When in Opposition, we strongly opposed the change, because it had the potential to si

housing
470
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

As the shadow Minister has just made clear, amendment 59 seeks to introduce a new ground for possession into schedule 2 of the 1988 Act to allow landlords to evict tenants when they wish to use the property for the purposes of providing care. Although I appreciate the sentiment behind the shadow Minister’s proposals, I

housing
179
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

In addition to the points I made previously, I briefly draw the shadow Minister’s attention to the fact that ground 8 will remain mandatory, and discretionary grounds will also be available when arrears do not meet the mandatory threshold, such as in cases of repeated late payment. We think the courts have the necessar

housing
114
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

Taken together, amendments 62 and 63 seek to remove the requirement for a tenant to meet the arrears threshold for mandatory eviction at the date of hearing. Instead, they would allow a tenant to be evicted only if they met the threshold at the date of the notice and had any arrears at all remaining at the date of thei

housing
346
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

I thank the shadow Minister for that intervention, and I understand the point he makes. If it is acceptable to him, I will write to him with the technical detail about what substantial development entails. As I say, in most cases where substantial development is not taking place, works to ensure that homes come up to t

housing
259
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

As the shadow Minister just made clear, amendment 60 would introduce a new mandatory ground for possession—6ZA—into schedule 2 of the Housing Act 1988. It would allow landlords to evict when they need to undertake works to meet the decent homes standard introduced by the Bill and those works cannot be completed without

housing
208
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

I thank the hon. Lady for her further contribution. I have weighed very carefully in the balance, and looking at the Bill in the round, whether a two-year protected period would be appropriate. I concluded it would not be, taking into account those edge cases, for the following reasons. While I sympathise with the poin

housing
341
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

As the hon. Member for Bristol Central has set out, amendments 42 and 43 seek to extend the protected period for the moving in and selling grounds to two years. Amendment 58, in contrast, seeks to remove the protected period for the selling ground entirely. We believe that the Bill strikes the right balance in this are

housing
392
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

I do not have much to add to what I have already said. I commend the clause to the Committee. Amendment 1 agreed to. Clause 4, as amended, ordered to stand part of the Bill. Schedule 1 Changes to grounds for possession

housing
42
29 Oct 2024Renters' Rights Bill (Third sitting)

Without the threat of arbitrary section 21 evictions, tenants will be evicted only when landlords have reasonable grounds for doing so. Clause 4 amends the grounds for possession in schedule 2 of the Housing Act 1988. The grounds themselves are amended by schedule 1 of the Bill, which we will debate shortly. Most cruci

housing
765
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.