Key events
Households in temporary accommodation in England up 10% in past year, hitting record at 104,510, figures show
The number of households in temporary accommodation in England is at the highest level since records began 25 years ago, PA Media reports. PA says:
As of 31 March this year, 104,510 households were in temporary accommodation, up 10% from the same point last year, according to homelessness statistics released by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.
Compared with the previous quarter, the number of households in temporary accommodation increased by 4%.
This latest figure surpasses a previous high of 101,300 reached in 2004, and is the highest among all the government figures available since 1998.
Plan to replace gas boilers with heat pumps should be reviewed, says Gove
Here are the main quotes from Michael Gove in his morning interviews on net zero issues.
That is one area where I do think we need to review. It is important that new homes meet net-zero challenges but one of the challenges we have is with our existing housing stock.
There are proposals to decarbonise our existing housing stock which I think are the right direction to go but I think the cost of some of those changes may impose on homeowners, and indeed on landlords, I think at this point in time we do need to be careful about imposing.
Because we are living in a real cost-of-living challenge and what we don’t want to do is to force individuals to pay excessive sums at this stage, we need to take a proportionate approach.
Yes. We’re committed to maintaining our policy of ensuring that by 2030 there are no new petrol and diesel cars being sold.
I’m sure there are some people who would like to change that policy, I understand. But that policy remains.
It’s important that the government does press ahead with appropriate and thoughtful steps in order to safeguard the environment but there are some specific areas where the cost that is being imposed on individuals risks creating a backlash.
We don’t want to get to a situation where the support for improving our environment curdles and turns into resistance.
And he told Sky News:
We saw recently in the Netherlands that an inflexible approach to environmental rules actually led to a backlash and it now has a significant body of people who are unhappy about the steps being taken.
Gove to holiday on Greek island as he says travel to region is safe
It is still safe for tourists to travel to Rhodes in line with UK government advice, Michael Gove has said. The levelling up secretary added that he was planning to holiday on another Greek island himself next week. Ben Quinn has the story here.
This is from the Times’s Matt Chorley on what he thinks the government may be up to with its net zero messaging.
Gove says 2030 ‘immovable’ date to ban new petrol cars sales as MPs tell Sunak to halt ‘mixed signals’ on climate policy
Good morning. Michael Gove, the levelling up secretary, has been giving interviews this morning and talking, among other things, about the government’s approach to net zero policies. He was quite specific on a couple of points, but to say that he cleared things up would be going too far. Over the last few days, in government pronouncements on this topic, there has been more ambiguity than in a modernist poem.
All of this has been quite good for those of us paid to report what the government is saying and explain what it means. But for producers trying to plan on the basis of what government rules will be for cars and boilers etc over the next decade, the uncertainty has been less welcome.
To recap: a significant number of Tory MPs, and rightwing papers, have always opposed net zero measures that will impose costs on consumers and on Friday their hand was strengthened after the Conservatives unexpectedly won the Uxbridge and South Ruislip byelection, almost certainly because of a backlash about the extension of Ulez. That led to media reports on Saturday saying the government was rethinking its support for green measures, and a day later the Sunday Telegraph splashed on an interview with Gove headlined: “Gove: net zero can’t become a crusade.” On Monday, when Rishi Sunak was asked in an interview if he was still committed to stopping the sale of new petrol and diesel cars from 2030, he gave a reply best summarised by Politico, which said he sounded “a bit U-turnish on some of his net zero plans”. At the lobby briefing an hour or so later the PM’s spokesperson said the government was, in fact, committed to the petrol/diesel new car ban from 2030. But separate briefing implied this was one of several measures that could be subject to review.
This morning Gove said that 2030 was “immovable” as the date when the ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel cars would take effect. But he did say that government proposals for gas boilers to be banned from newly built homes from 2025, with all gas boiler installation phased out from 2035, could be reviewed. I will post more from his interviews shortly.
Did that help? On gas boilers, probably. But on petrol and diesel cars? Gove has form for confidently asserting things on the Today programme that turn out not to be the case – during Brexit he insisted a key vote would definitely go ahead on hours before it was shelved – and so you might think twice before making a car factory investment on the basis of a Gove comment in a radio interview.
Gove was speaking as a group of MPs released an open letter to the prime minister urging him to avoid “mixed signals” on the UK’s commitment to climate action. In their letter, the all-party parliamentary group on climate said:
The Climate Change Committee’s recent 2023 progress report to parliament is unequivocal that mixed signals on the UK’s commitment to serious climate action is undermining this work, damaging our reputation, and risks us permanently surrendering our status as a world leader on climate action.
Now is a crucial moment for you to demonstrate to the world that the UK is not demoting itself to become a passive observer in international action on climate change, that we remain a trusted partner and committed to delivering on our promises.
Fiona Harvey has more on the letter here.
There is not much in the diary for today, but here are two items that may produce news.
9.30am: The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities publishes homelessness statistics.
10am: Jeremy Quin, the Cabinet Office minister, gives evidence to the infected blood inquiry.
Also, Lee Rowley, the local government minister, is hosting a roundtable meeting in Downing Street on plans announced overnight to speed up planning decisions for large infrastructure projects.
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