Housing campaigners and leaseholders caught up in the cladding crisis have warned Michael Gove’s sacking could rip up progress the levelling up secretary made on some of housing’s biggest issues.
Boris Johnson fired Gove on Wednesday night for “disloyalty” after his long-time rival reportedly told the prime minister to resign. Following the resignation of the housing minister Stuart Andrew, that left the government’s flagship levelling up department with almost no ministers – only homelessness minister Eddie Hughes remains.
The news is a blow for campaigners who have seen Michael Gove take charge of housing matters after he was brought to lead the newly renamed department last September.
In his 10 months in the role, Gove made progress in tackling the building safety crisis which had rumbled on since the Grenfell Tower disaster in 2017, squeezing money from housing developers to prevent leaseholders picking up six-figure bills.
He also introduced radical legislation to ban “no fault” evictions after a three-year wait and shift the power balance between renters and landlords as well as a new bill to improve social housing with both bills set to go through parliament this year.
Another bill in Gove’s name has already been disrupted by the Westminster crisis – the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill, which included legislation to tackle empty homes, second homes and planning among other fixes, was due to be scrutinised at a committee on Thursday.