Labour鈥檚 manifesto is leaked, then released, and the Conservatives try to park their tanks on Labour鈥檚 lawn

Joey Gardiner

Without doubt the biggest election news in the last week was the non-launch and then relaunch of the Labour Party鈥檚 manifesto in somewhat chaotic circumstances. 鈥淐rash Bang Wallies鈥 guffawed the Sun on its front page. The manifesto changed very little between its leaked version and its final form, containing a raft of policies affecting the sector. Chief among them were a headline 拢250bn to be spent on infrastructure, an aim to retain the benefits of single market and customs union membership in Brexit negotiations, a promise (as expected) of 100,000 affordable homes a year, and a pledge for a new generation of new towns. Were a Corbyn government a more realistic prospect, there would most likely be alarm from some developers about the prospect of (limited) rent regulation, housing space standards and new rights for tenants.

Probably more significant to the sector, however, was Theresa May鈥檚 pledge (made in an interview with the Sunday Times) to build a new generation of council homes. In the latest attempt by May to park her tanks on Labour鈥檚 lawn, she said a proportion of the homes built by councils and housing associations would then be offered for sale, first to tenants, after 10 or 15 years 鈥 requiring a change in the law. Implying that homes would be built that don鈥檛 stay affordable in perpetuity, she said the scheme would 鈥渉elp thousands of people get on the first rung of the housing ladder鈥 and that 鈥渇ixed terms will make sure money is reinvested so we have a constant supply of new homes for social rent鈥. In other words, a promise not to make the same mistakes as last time and sell off homes with no mechanism in place to replace them 鈥 leading in part to the very crisis in housing that these policies are trying to fix.

Meanwhile, Mark Naysmith, the UK boss of WSP intervened in the election debate by saying that it was vital, whichever government gets in, not to let up on infrastructure spending, while starchitect Lord Foster told his design peers 鈥 in so many words 鈥 to accept the reality of Brexit and get over it.

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Letter

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The letter summarises construction鈥檚 importance to the UK economy and calls on election candidates to consider the key demands in the 好色先生TV a Better Brexit manifesto.

A list of the candidates is available from the official political parties鈥 websites, along with contact details. Feel free to add local examples of important construction projects or related issues 鈥 we would also be interested to hear about these local stories, so please email us building@ubm.com.