Firstly, I am merely a tenant in a private rental, I have no legal experience or anything like that,.
I have written to my MP, as well as the Housing Minister and various other government bodies about the housing crisis and how bad the current system is, especially the private rented sector.
Although my MP (a Lib Dem) was sympathetic and actually bothered to reply to my letter, he said there was very little he could do. I have either had generic responses or no response at all from all the other politicians/groups I have written to.
There seems to be little political will to actually deal with the housing crisis, presumably because most politicians own multiple houses or are landlords and building companies and landlords keep them in power. Boris Johnson seems to happily have his head in the sand in regards to the acute housing crisis in London but I suppose he never has to worry about paying the rent or not being able to decorate.
Anyway, the crux of this post is that I wondered if the EU legal system could be used to force some changes through? Since it looks like the UK is going to stay in the EU at any cost, us mortals might as well try and use EU laws or the ECHR to our advantage. Since there is little political will from UK politicians to help the younger generation, bring down house prices or radically overhaul the private rented sector, perhaps there is a way that EU laws can force these changes through?
There must be some part of the ECHR that is being broken by not only by the appalling lack of rights for tenants in the PRS but also by the disparity between rights and costs of those in the Private Rented Sector compared to those in social housing.
I know that the ECHR only applies to public bodies but there must be some way of challenging the status quo, which is currently exploitative, damaging the economy and destroying lives.
I feel very passionately that something needs to be done but it is like banging your head against a brick wall since it is so very hard to change a system which is made by those who benefit from it.
I have written to my MP, as well as the Housing Minister and various other government bodies about the housing crisis and how bad the current system is, especially the private rented sector.
Although my MP (a Lib Dem) was sympathetic and actually bothered to reply to my letter, he said there was very little he could do. I have either had generic responses or no response at all from all the other politicians/groups I have written to.
There seems to be little political will to actually deal with the housing crisis, presumably because most politicians own multiple houses or are landlords and building companies and landlords keep them in power. Boris Johnson seems to happily have his head in the sand in regards to the acute housing crisis in London but I suppose he never has to worry about paying the rent or not being able to decorate.
Anyway, the crux of this post is that I wondered if the EU legal system could be used to force some changes through? Since it looks like the UK is going to stay in the EU at any cost, us mortals might as well try and use EU laws or the ECHR to our advantage. Since there is little political will from UK politicians to help the younger generation, bring down house prices or radically overhaul the private rented sector, perhaps there is a way that EU laws can force these changes through?
There must be some part of the ECHR that is being broken by not only by the appalling lack of rights for tenants in the PRS but also by the disparity between rights and costs of those in the Private Rented Sector compared to those in social housing.
I know that the ECHR only applies to public bodies but there must be some way of challenging the status quo, which is currently exploitative, damaging the economy and destroying lives.
I feel very passionately that something needs to be done but it is like banging your head against a brick wall since it is so very hard to change a system which is made by those who benefit from it.
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