Wondering what the Conservatives, Labour and the Lib Dems have said on construction topics in their manifestos? PBC Today’s roundup gives you the lowdown on 2024 election promises

With Polling Day less than a month away, each of the major parties have now released their manifestos for the 2024 election.

After 14 years, 5 prime ministers, 2 recessions and 1 Brexit, many are predicting a wipeout of Tory candidates. Electoral Calculus has predicted that the Conservatives could lose nearly 300 seats, with Labour securing a landslide larger than the 1997 election results under Tony Blair [as of 13 June 2024].

But what does it mean for UK construction?

On housing:

Conservatives

Building 1.6m homes in England through the next Parliament
A “new and improved” Help to Buy scheme
A Renters Reform Bill for “landlords and renters alike”, with court reforms promised to abolish Section 21 evictions
Fast-tracking brownfield residential developments in cities
Abolishing nutrient neutrality
Making the 2022 Stamp Duty threshold permanent

Labour

Delivering 1.5m new homes in England over the next five years
Immediately update the National Policy Planning Framework to restore mandatory housing targets
Fast-tracking approval of urban brownfield sites and prioritising the release of lower quality ‘grey belt’ land
“Implement solutions” to homes affected by nutrient neutrality- without weakening environmental protections
Introduce a permanent, comprehensive mortgage guarantee scheme for first time buyers
Immediately abolish Section 21 ‘no fault’ evictions

Liberal Democrats

Increasing building of new homes to 380,000 a year across the UK, including 150,000 social homes a year
Abolishing residential leaseholds and capping ground rents to a nominal fee
Immediately banning no-fault evictions, making three-year tenancies the default, and creating a national register of licensed landlords
Introducing ‘use-it-or-lose-it’ planning permission for developers who refuse to build
Give local authorities the powers to end Right to Buy

Green Party

150,000 new social homes every year
Ending the individual ‘right to buy’, to keep social homes for local communities in perpetuity
Introducing rent controls, a new stable rental tenancy and ending no-fault evictions, as well as introducing a tenants right to demand energy efficiency improvements
Ensure that all new homes meet Passivhaus or equivalent standards and house builders include solar panels and heat pumps on all new homes, where appropriate

On infrastructure

Conservatives

Invest £8.3bn to fill potholes and resurface roads
Committing a further £12bn to Northern Powerhouse rail work between Liverpool and Manchester

Labour

Merge the NIC and IPA into a single infrastructure body, Nista
Improvements to rail connectivity in the north of England, fixing five million potholes over the next five years and better preparing communities for extreme weather events
Bring the railways into public ownership

Liberal Democrats

Increasing rollout and support for electric vehicles
Increased devolution to give local authorities power to upgrade local infrastructure

Green Party

Require all new developments to be accompanied by the extra investment needed in local health, transport and other services

On energy:

Conservatives

Deliver net zero by 2050
Annual licensing rounds for oil and gas production in the North Sea
Scale up nuclear power, with two new fleets of Small Modular Reactors and establishing Great British Nuclear
Invest £1.1bn into the Green Industries Growth Accelerator
Moratorium on fracking to continue

Labour

Reaching clean energy by 2030, with net zero to follow
Bring Hinkley Point C to completion, as well as increasing rollout of small modular reactors (SMR)
Fracking will be banned and no new coal licenses will be issued, but oil and gas operations in the North Sea will continue
Nearly £5bn of investment in gigafactories, carbon capture and green hydrogen
A £6.6bn Warm Homes Plan that will help install energy efficiency upgrades in 5m homes to cut bills

Liberal Democrats

A ten-year emergency upgrade programme that will make homes warmer and cheaper to heat and ensure that all new homes are zero-carbon
Invest in renewable power so that 90% of the UK’s electricity is generated from renewables by 2030
Upgrade the National Grid to meet growing energy demand

Green Party

Phasing out nuclear energy and stopping all new fossil fuel extraction projects in the UK, with recent fossil fuel licenses issued such as for Rosebank cancelled
All oil and gas subsidies to be removed
Introducing a carbon tax on all fossil fuel imports and domestic extraction
Wind to provide around 70% of the UK’s electricity by 2030
Investment in energy storage capacity and more efficient electricity distribution

On the economy:

Conservatives

Promise to cut taxes by £17.2bn by 2030
Abolish the main rate of National Insurance entirely by the next Parliament
No raise of corporation tax
Creating a business rates support package worth £4.3bn over the next five years to support small businesses

Labour

Raise £8.5bn a year from tax rises and cracking down on avoidance up to 2028/29
“Securonomics” – a financial approach “that understands sustainable growth relies on a broad base and resilient foundations”
£7.3bn National Wealth Fund, with a target to attract “three pounds of private investment for every one pound of public investment” in growth and clean energy

Liberal Democrats

Protecting the independence of the Bank of England and keeping the inflation target of 2%
Reverse the Conservatives’ tax cuts for big banks and imposing a one-off windfall tax on the super-profits of oil and gas producers and traders
Cut income tax(“when the public finances allow”) by raising the tax-free personal allowance

Green Party

£40bn investment per year to deliver the shift to a green economy over the course of the next Parliament

Read more of our coverage of the General Election here and the individual manifestos below:

Conservatives
Labour
Liberal Democrats
Greens

The post General Election 2024: What each party promise means for UK construction appeared first on Planning, Building & Construction Today.

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General Election 2024: What each party promise means for UK construction
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