The Liberal Democrats in the House of Lords have tabled a motion
in an attempt to block new Government orders which will allow
evictions of private renters in England to resume from 23rd
August.
Liberal Demcorat Housing Spokesperson in the Lords has tabled a
'pray to annul' motion to the Government's statutory
instrument which was laid before Parliament last Friday (17th
July 2020).
The Statutory Instrument requires landlords who are seeking
possession of their property to submit a ‘reactivation notice’,
but concerns were raised when it became clear that judges will
have no legal means to prevent a ‘no-fault’ eviction, even when
faced with evidence that the tenant has been impacted by the
pandemic.
The motion put forward by is the
strongest form of objection a motion in the House of Lords can
take. If this motion wins, the Government's statutory instrument
would be overturned.
Liberal Democrat Housing Spokesperson in the Lords,
,
said:
“Ministers have signed off for their summer holidays without so
much as a backward glance at all the renters they have left in
the lurch this summer. What the Government should have done is
fulfilled their election promise and scrapped no fault evictions
altogether, but instead they have just gone back to business as
usual allowing evictions of tenants with no explanation.
“The fact they snuck these rules out without guidance and without
Parliamentary scrutiny demonstrates once again that for this
Government renters will always be left behind. The promise in
March that “no renter who has lost income due to coronavirus will
be forced out of their homes” was nothing more than hollow
words.
“This is the strongest opposition Parliament can take to the
Civil Procedure Rules change – and we hope everyone will rally
behind this. The Liberal Democrats will continue to hold this
Government to account and stand up for renters' rights."
ENDS
Notes to editors
A letter to Secretary of State from Generation Rent can be found here,
asking a series of questions about the changes to the Civil
Procedure Rules.
The full text of the motion is as follows:
to move
that a Humble Address be presented to Her Majesty praying that
the Civil Procedure (Amendment No. 4) (Coronavirus) Rules 2020,
laid before the House on 17 July, be annulled because they will
permit evictions which have been paused during the COVID-19
pandemic to be resumed before Parliament has had an opportunity
to debate the impact of the Rules on (1) homelessness, and (2)
the spread of COVID-19 (SI 2020/751).