British BulletinBritish Bulletin
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
What's On

England women appoint Tom Smith as bowling coach

2 April 2026

Petrol and diesel drivers brace for highest-ever fuel costs after ‘record monthly price hike’

2 April 2026

Christopher Hope delivers brilliant response after Keir Starmer snubs People’s Channel star for TikToker

2 April 2026

King Charles honours Aberfan disaster survivor with OBE

2 April 2026

NS&I Premium Bonds prize checker confirms April 2026 winners but 62% of savers win nothing: ‘Luck of the draw!’

2 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
British Bulletin
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
British BulletinBritish Bulletin
Home » Labour ‘failing to build enough houses to keep pace with mass migration’
Politics

Labour ‘failing to build enough houses to keep pace with mass migration’

By britishbulletin.com6 January 20264 Mins Read
Labour ‘failing to build enough houses to keep pace with mass migration’
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

New analysis has suggested Labour is not keeping up with demand to build new homes amid current net migration figures.

According to official housing supply data, 237,630 new homes were completed in the year to June 2025.


Meanwhile, net migration totalled 204,000 people during that same period, the Daily Mail reports.

The study, which was conducted by the Conservative Party, found migrants would require the equivalent of 86,441 of the newly-built properties, or around 36 per cent.

A Tory spokesman said it showed “the full scale of Labour’s housing crisis”, adding the Government had “failed to build anywhere near enough homes to match the levels of immigration they have allowed in their first year”.

However, Labour hit back, saying they were “getting on with the job”.

The analysis by the Tories said it was based on official housing supply data, Office for National Statistics net migration figures and Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) forecast showing net migration will add more than 1.76 million people to the UK population by 2030.

Therefore, it means 749,250 additional homes will be required, which at current rates will be the equivalent of 52 per cent of new housebuilding, although the Tories said increased construction rates forecast by the OBR would see that figure fall to 50 per cent.

According to official housing supply data, 237,630 new homes were completed

|

PA

Shadow Housing Secretary Sir James Cleverly said Labour was falling short of their ambitious house building targets.

He said: “Labour’s first year has shown they cannot build the homes Britain needs, let alone keep pace with the pressures their own immigration policy has created.

“The Conservatives have set out a plan that tackles the problem at both ends. We will curb the pressures driving demand, scrap Stamp Duty to get the market moving, and free up the homes families need.

“That is how we restore fairness and give people a real path to ownership.”

Former Home Secretary Sir James Cleverly said Labour ‘could not keep up’

| PA

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said British families were left “paying the price” for Labour’s migration policy, while also taking aim at Reform UK.

He said: “Labour have opened the door to record immigration without any plan to deal with the consequences. This is the cost of Labour’s failure, but the Conservatives will not stand by while fairness is torn up.

“Through our borders plan, we will leave the European Convention on Human Rights, remove all illegal immigrants within a week of arrival, end the merry-go-round of appeals, then the crossings will stop.

“But Keir Starmer doesn’t have the backbone to do this, and Reform are a one-man band with no detailed plans.”

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp called Reform UK a ‘one man band’

|

PA

Back in 2024, Labour’s General Election manifesto had pledged to build 1.5 million new homes “over the next parliament”.

A Tory spokesman said: “This is the pattern of Labour’s first year. Open borders, record pressure on housing, and no plan to build enough homes.

“British families are pushed further down waiting lists, rents rise, prices rise, and the gap between supply and demand widens with every passing month.”

Responding to the Tories, a Labour spokesman said: “‘This is a bit rich. Since the Tories left office Labour has cut legal migration by two-thirds and house building has become a top priority for the government. They are right that fixing the problems they left us is difficult, but Labour is getting on with the job.”

Matthew Pennycook admitted progress had been ‘slow’

|

PARLIAMENT.TV

Back in December, Housing Minister Matthew Pennycook admitted “progress” towards meeting Labour’s manifesto pledge, to build 1.5 million new homes by the end of this Parliament, had been “slow.”

He told the Commons: “Progress towards that ambitious 1.5 million new homes target was always going to be slow in the early years of this Parliament.

“After all, the Government inherited a housing market downturn exacerbated by the conscious and deliberate decisions of ministers in the previous Conservative government to make a series of anti-supply changes to national planning policy, including the abolition of mandatory housing targets.”

Shadow housing minister Gareth Bacon labelled the Government’s housebuilding record “dreadful”, adding it would take seven years to meet the manifesto commitment.

He said: “In London under their abysmal mayor [Sir Sadiq Khan], for the last decade Labour have conspicuously failed to build the right amount of housing and now they are going to fail to build the right kind of housing in the right places in the rest of England, clearly preferring to target building in rural areas, while not building in the cities and urban areas where demand is highest and much of the necessary infrastructure already exists.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Christopher Hope delivers brilliant response after Keir Starmer snubs People’s Channel star for TikToker

Labour peer accused of mocking grooming gang inquiry: ‘Just because I’m Muslim!’

Migrant crisis: Shabana Mahmood told to stop paying France amid fears deal could cost £1.4BILLION

‘Reckless’ health workers defy Keir Starmer and confirm walkout WILL go ahead

Suella Braverman slams appointment of trans lobbyist to endometriosis charity

Kemi Badenoch pledges to ditch carbon levies ‘killing British industry’

Reform row: Suella Braverman tears into teaching union for ‘declaring war’ on Reform: ‘Crossed a line’!

Keir Starmer pushes for closeness with EU warning Iran conflict will ‘affect the future of country’

Roman Abramovich set to defy Keir Starmer as Prime Minister fails to secure £2.35billion for Ukraine victims

Editors Picks

Petrol and diesel drivers brace for highest-ever fuel costs after ‘record monthly price hike’

2 April 2026

Christopher Hope delivers brilliant response after Keir Starmer snubs People’s Channel star for TikToker

2 April 2026

King Charles honours Aberfan disaster survivor with OBE

2 April 2026

NS&I Premium Bonds prize checker confirms April 2026 winners but 62% of savers win nothing: ‘Luck of the draw!’

2 April 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Brittan News and Updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

Sadiq Khan issues stern statement as London Mayor condemns UK festival’s decision to book Kanye West

2 April 2026

April’s full Pink Moon lights up UK night sky | UK News

2 April 2026

Women’s World Cup qualifying: Teenager Mayzee Davies back in Wales squad to face Albania

2 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 British Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.