Landlords and the General Election: Who should we vote for?

Landlords and the General Election: Who should we vote for?

9:46 AM, 24th May 2024, About 2 months ago 66

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Rishi Sunak’s surprise announcement to call a General Election might turn out to be one of the best political gambles of modern times but where will landlords stand?

None of the parties have been kind to landlords in recent years, so I don’t expect that will change before July 4.

So, here’s my message to Rishi and Sir Kier about what we would like to see – though it isn’t really a Landlord Crusader PRS manifesto (though that will come soon…).

The bottom line is that we all want a private rented sector that works for tenants AND landlords but all we hear about are tenants.

Tenant rights, tenants can’t find a house, tenants want to keep pets. I could go on ad nauseam.

We never hear about landlords struggling to stay in business, tenants aren’t paying rent, the courts are backed up or tenants have trashed my house. Again.

Political parties want to improve housing numbers

No doubt we will hear over the coming weeks that political parties want to improve housing numbers and protect tenants.

There’s never a joining up of the dots is there? No one ever takes a step back to consider why landlords are selling to create a housing shortage.

And shortages lead to rising rents.

It must be down to greedy landlords, not the high tax rates and legislation or councils imposing selective licensing schemes with outrageously high fees.

We pay admin fees for the paperwork and an inspection regime that never comes.

I say we pay; the fees are passed on to the tenant, but we have seen councils demanding this should not be done when discussing a licensing scheme.

It’s just a never-ending circus of nonsense, expenses and idiot politicians playing to the stalls.

The only ones that have stood up for us, to my memory, are the Tory MPs who made some amendments to the Renters (Reform) Bill and were criticised for doing so.

The PRS will become a political football

I am predicting that at some point in the campaign, the PRS will become a political football.

It will be interesting to hear what the Conservatives have to say about helping or growing the PRS after years of neglect.

Our relationship mirrors the worst form of domestic abuse – we take the knocks because we don’t want to leave the PRS.

Most of us know what we should do but don’t want to leave our tenants in the lurch.

You won’t hear politicians or tenant activist groups make this point before the election.

We need to encourage landlords to invest, sort out Section 24 and CGT – landlords are being taxed into not investing.

And yes, we should abolish all selective licensing schemes.

Rent stabilisation and a National Landlords Register

Vote Labour? After that report on bringing in a tenant’s charter, ‘rent stabilisation’ and a National Landlords Register?

You have got to be joking! Their promise to abolish Section 21 on day one will prove to be hot air.

Let’s say they did win (they won’t) and did that. Landlords will sell up and I’m betting Sir Kier isn’t predicting a slide in house prices when so many properties come on the market!

Like Corbyn before him, it’s one thing spouting sixth-form politics but something else entirely when the hard decisions must be taken.

Vote Lib Dems? They are not liberal or democratic so it’s a hard no from me. Reform. Hmmm, I would literally give anyone exhibiting common sense a crack.

This will also send a message to the Establishment that many of us are sick of what has happened in the last 10 years.

If the Conservatives don’t hang on with a tiny majority, and Labour do take power then we will eventually see their commitment to transferring control of a property to the tenant become reality.

I’ve been banging on about this for a long time and landlords are now starting to wake up.

Let’s face it, we all want a fair deal for both landlords and tenants, but all we get is ridicule and higher bills.

Tenants get away with not paying us and we have to deal with a court system that doesn’t appear to recognise that this is a serious problem.

Whichever party gets in will need to reform the courts and ensure a quick possession route is implemented.

Landlords who have been in the PRS for many years

For landlords who have been in the PRS for many years, I doubt you see it as a long-term investment anymore. Increasing legislation – most of it poorly thought through – and poor-quality tenants have changed the PRS beyond recognition.

How on earth do we plan for the future? What with the talk of rent caps and abolishing Section 21, landlords look like losing control of their properties and will struggle to evict non-paying tenants.

You’d think the government, a Conservative one especially, would actually care about property owners being turned over in this way. Apparently not.

Not getting possession, more laws and rising expenses are making investment in the PRS a really risky undertaking. It’s not money for old rope anymore (though most of us never saw the ‘glory years’ of the 90’s).

Will the Renters (Reform) Bill even get through the ‘wash up’ and be made law before Parliament breaks up? If not, what happens next?

Do Labour have to start the whole process again – though they’ll add even more garbage to it.

Or will the Tories bite the bullet and push it through thinking it will win votes among the tenants of this country?

If they do, it will become more difficult to find a home and with rising immigration and an ageing population, things aren’t about to get better.

If landlords vote Conservative after years of being let down and victimised, is that like turkeys voting for Christmas?

I think this is the first General Election where I have literally no idea who to vote for. And that fact scares me – and it should make all landlords think twice too.

Until next time,

The Landlord Crusader


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john thompson

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19:21 PM, 26th May 2024, About 2 months ago

Labour will be a disaster for the country, landlords AND tenants.
Tories have zero chance of getting back in we all know it, they have been the worst Conservative government ever!

Might as well vote Reform, they have got lots of commonsense policies for the PRS and whoever you vote for it won't change the result anyway, Labour are getting in by a landslide.
A least with Reform its a protest vote, you can hold your head up as your not endorsing either of the clown parties who hate you...shame on you if you do.

david porter

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20:26 PM, 26th May 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by john thompson at 26/05/2024 - 19:21
I seem to recall that Labour only get to form a Government by winning seats in Scotland.
For the recent past the SNP have kept them out,
However some of them seem to be facing porridge for breakfast and so the future is uncertain in Scotland?

Stella

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22:12 PM, 26th May 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by john thompson at 26/05/2024 - 19:21
If I thought that reform would win I would certainly vote for them.

However if we all say "I might as well vote for reform" then that is a wasted vote and will surely give a big advantage to Labour.

What Ms Rayner and her colleagues have in store for the PRS is unworkable and and even worse than the Tories.

At least the RRB that was instigated by the Tories is now dead.

Cider Drinker

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8:38 AM, 27th May 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Stella at 26/05/2024 - 22:12
If we all vote for Reform the Reform will win and your vote won’t be wasted.

I know a number of unemployed people on benefits that love the Tories because of all the payouts they’ve received for one thing or another,

I cannot vote for this Conservative despite being a party member (until Sunak was shoe horned into No 10 without a vote by members).

I cannot vote for Labour. Starmer, Rayner and Abbott being just a few of my reasons.

So, it’ll be Reform or the Greens for me.

john thompson

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9:45 AM, 27th May 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 27/05/2024 - 08:38
As much as I also want Reform to win I very much doubt they will get many seats, let alone get in.
We're going to get lumbered with Labour manly because the vast majority will never vote for the Cons again and I suspect many will not bother voting at all.
So either way I will be voting reform too, unfortunately I just know they stand little chance of winning.

Phil Landlord

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11:30 AM, 27th May 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by david porter at 25/05/2024 - 10:38Thanks, that’s interesting.
Nope I won’t be buying property in Singapore but only because I don’t have enough to spread around like Ray Dalio and I want to remain a lot more liquid.
However, I am selling up and have gone from 11 properties to 7 and one of those is on the market (one of them is split into 3 flats so actual number will be 4 remaining after selling but 6 rental units). Much easier now and decent income to live on.
However, specific emerging markets (not all) will surge ahead once adjustments start as the West gets hit with poor productivity, deficits, debts and currency pressures. We are already starting to see it with funds that are selective. Ignoring the ‘big 7’ bubble in the US.
However if investing in those emerging markets I would prefer equities for a quicker exit if need be.
Back to the main thread….Voting is going to be really difficult this time. Not sure it make much odds but probably a protest vote will have to suffice.
As the famous expression goes ‘if voting made a difference they wouldn’t let us do it’

Jim

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13:33 PM, 27th May 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by TheMaluka at 24/05/2024 - 10:26
All Landlords suffer abuse from the British Government, and I mean it is actual abuse!

The Forever Tenant

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13:43 PM, 27th May 2024, About 2 months ago

Now I am speaking as a tenant, you would expect that I would be going down heavy on the side of Labour. Not at all. I am of the opinion that Labour will act in almost the exact same way as the Conservatives. There is honestly little to distinguish the two parties any more. I think any differences perceived are based on their historical make up, which is no longer what they are.

Unfortunately we are also people with short memories and we live in the here and now. I am sure that everyone here is aware of our countries situation, what the economy is like and the way it is going. Everyone here can see the financial troubles that we are going to have soon, the only question is when.

Even though we can see it coming, if it occurs within the next 5 years people will be very quick to blame the Labour government for 100% of it. Doesn't matter the actual reason behind it, we will blame them.

However I do also feel that a lot of societal ill's are out of the hands of the government and it is the actions of big businesses that have started us along this path. There are a thousand factors as to why we are where we are now and looking at them it strangely looks like its not the government for most of them.

john thompson

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13:47 PM, 27th May 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Jim at 27/05/2024 - 13:33Absolutely..they know they can bully us around because we are basically a small minority with a weak toothless representation.

Throwing in the towel LL

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15:32 PM, 28th May 2024, About 2 months ago

I'm 70 years old and selling up - I only have two properties left now, one tenant is hopefully leaving soon and the other I'm unfortunately having to pursue eviction down the court route. I have been a lifelong Tory voter but I must say that over the last few years they have made an absolute pigs ear of things. I will be voting Reform and I will be hoping they will do what it says on the tin...Reform. It seems they intend to tackle many problems this country has that other parties will not even talk about. I realise they will not win but as someone said in a previous comment it will act as a protest vote, and any party has to start somewhere, so lets give them a chance.

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