Westminster Watch on Radio 4 held a
discussion around the fate of rough sleepers particularly during adverse
weather conditions. Heather Wheeler, government Housing Minister, stated that
this Tory government intended to improve the position of England’s estimated
4,700 rough sleepers.
When pressed by Westminster Watch presenter
Carolyn Quinn over the government’s claim of eliminating rough sleeping in
England within a decade Wheeler responded:
“It’s a high ambition. But I don’t see why we
won’t get that sorted. I accept that I am inheriting a very difficult, complex
problem – and I also accept that, six weeks in to the job, I am inheriting a
decisive prime ministerial decree which I will deliver.”
Asked how would
she feel if she was unable to deliver this goal Heather Wheeler responded:
“Well there are two answers to that: a)
it won’t and b) I’d resign.”
Wheeler listed
what she saw as the underlying reasons for homelessness and rough sleeping. She
cited drug, alcohol, mental health and family breakdown problems as underlying causes.
She mentioned a ‘housing first’ scheme
with a £28 million budget that would direct homeless people to shelters. From
here they could progress into ‘move-on’
homes aided by key workers, and from her into their own homes.
However, Wheeler’s
finally triggered my pharyngeal
reflex when she blathered,
“That is the
utopia and that is the line I want to see happening for these poor friends,”
Instead of Carolyn
Quinn challenging Wheeler’s government for creating the very poverty that feeds
into homelessness via the enforcement of their ‘Bedroom Tax’, compulsory payment of Council Tax by all, Universal
Credit, and benefits’ sanctions she gave her a pass. Indeed, she gushed at
Wheeler for stating on live radio that she’s resign if the government’s pledge
of solving the problem wasn’t met in a decade.
Pledging to resign
if a goal is not achieved in a decade is meaningless. The chances of Wheeler
being the Homeless Minister in ten years’ time is unlikely. The likelihood of
this particular Tory government being in power is, hopefully, improbable.
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