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Homelessness a disgrace - Cameron | Homelessness a disgrace - Cameron |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Conservative leader David Cameron has said it is a "disgrace" that people are sleeping on Britain's streets. | Conservative leader David Cameron has said it is a "disgrace" that people are sleeping on Britain's streets. |
Speaking in east London, he said the Tories wanted to become the "progressive party" on social issues. | Speaking in east London, he said the Tories wanted to become the "progressive party" on social issues. |
He launched the party's Homelessness Foundation, on which the heads of the UK's major housing charities will sit. | |
Housing minister Caroline Flint said the party's "warm words" were meaningless - as they opposed the government's house building targets. | |
Speaking in east London, Mr Cameron said it was important to look at the root causes of homelessness, such as poverty, mental illness, employment and housing shortages. | |
'Good society' | |
He said: "I think that it is simply a disgrace that in the fifth-biggest economy in the world that we have people homeless, people sleeping on the streets, sofa-surfers, people in hospitals." | He said: "I think that it is simply a disgrace that in the fifth-biggest economy in the world that we have people homeless, people sleeping on the streets, sofa-surfers, people in hospitals." |
Mr Cameron proposed greater links with the voluntary sector and offered to "hopefully put things into practice straight away" - in the "swathes" of councils and the London mayoralty won at this month's local elections. | |
Three years ago or possibly less it would not have been possible to have imagined a serious attempt to tackle homelessness by the Conservatives Grant ShappsShadow housing minister | |
He said: "I want the Conservative Party to get back to its roots. It should be as concerned with a good society as with a good economy, being a progressive party dealing with poverty and helping with disadvantage." | He said: "I want the Conservative Party to get back to its roots. It should be as concerned with a good society as with a good economy, being a progressive party dealing with poverty and helping with disadvantage." |
Among those who have agreed to serve on the foundation's advisory panel are John Bird, founder and editor of The Big Issue; Shelter's chief executive Adam Sampson; and Crisis chief executive Leslie Morphy. | |
The foundation will attempt to come up with solutions for thousands of families left without a permanent address. | |
The Conservatives' housing spokesman, Grant Shapps, said that "three years ago or possibly less it would not have been possible to have imagined a serious attempt to tackle homelessness by the Conservatives." | |
He added: "If we are honest, I think it is true to say that the centre-right has not led on the issue." | |
Shelter's Mr Sampson said it was "vital" tackling homelessness was a cross-party issue as it would take 15 years to solve the "crisis" of housing shortages, by building more homes. | |
But, for the government, Ms Flint said the previous Conservative government had halved capital spending on housing, and had not even counted the number of people sleeping rough. | |
She said the government had reduced rough sleeping by more than 70% and were investing £8bn in the next three years on social and affordable homes. | |
"Warm words from the Tories on housing are meaningless when they oppose our house building targets at a national level and block affordable housing development at a local level," she said. |
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