Mike Hancock CBE - Liberal Democrat MP for Portsmouth South

1A Albert Road
Southsea
Hampshire
PO5 2SE

Tel: 023 9286 1055
Email: email@mikehancock.co.uk

 Working for You - Always Putting Portsmouth First

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Mike's Columns in the Portsmouth News

Government must deal with the deepening Housing Crisis

18 December 2007

The number of people coming to me as their MP with housing problems has dramatically increased in the last few years. And that is perhaps not surprising when you look at the statistics. There are now over 5,000 households on the council housing waiting list in Portsmouth and the average house price in the city is now nine times average earnings.

Last week, I highlighted these concerns – long waits for council housing, high private sector rents and the difficulty of first time buyers getting on the housing ladder – in a debate in Parliament on the Government’s Housing Bill.

It was a tragedy that councils were not allowed to use the proceeds from the Tories’ “Right to Buy” scheme to invest in new properties. Now there are just 15,000 properties, mostly smaller flats, left in council ownership in the city.

The lack of council properties and long waits mean people are often advised to rent privately. But private rents are, on average, double council rents. While those on benefits or low incomes will have most of their rent met by Housing Benefit, if people then get a job or a better paid job most of their Housing Benefit will be taken away.

But does the £14 billion paid nationally in housing benefit offer value for money? Surely, over time, that money could be better spent by investing in council housing rather than pouring it into private landlord’s pockets?

Unfortunately overall the Government’s bill is too little, too late. We need to make more houses more affordable. So, the Lib Dems have therefore proposed new idea called "equity mortgages" where people priced out of the housing market could buy homes built for a local authority at cost price. The council would retain part ownership, allowing it to control the price of the property at future sales, ensuring it remained genuinely affordable for generations.

Bad, overcrowded, housing particularly affects children’s life chances and ability to succeed at school as well as their health. But I believe a prosperous nation like us can afford decent housing for all and I will continue to be fighting for that as an MP.

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Liberal Democrat News

01 February 2012
The ASA ruled that the image used in an advertisement for L’Oréal Paris’ Revitalift Repair 10 was altered to change Rachel Weisz’s complexion, making it appear smoother and more even. It was judged to be in breach of industry code and “misleadingly exaggerated” the performance of the product.

The advertisement has been banned in its current form and the ASA has warned L’Oréal not to use digital retouching to misrepresent the effect of their products.

Commenting, Jo Swinson said:
“The beauty and advertising industries need to stop ripping off consumers with dishonest images. 

“The banning of this advert, along with the previous ASA rulings banning heavily retouched ads featuring Twiggy, Julia Roberts and Christy Turlington, should act as a wake-up call. Thankfully the advertising regulator has again acknowledged the fraudulent nature of excessive retouching.
 
“The Royal College of Psychiatrists has spoken out about the harmful influence of the media on body image and has highlighted the airbrushing and digital enhancement used to portray physical perfection as an area of concern.
 
“There needs to be much more diversity in advertising – different skin colours, body shapes, sizes and ages.  Studies show that people want to see more authenticity from brands.  Images can be aspirational without being faked.

“The Campaign for Body Confidence challenges the narrow ideal of beauty perpetuated by the media and other industries. Tonight the All Party Parliamentary Group on Body Image is hosting a screening of the documentary Miss Representation which explores the impact on society of such an intense focus on women’s appearance, instead of their achievements. 

“The film shows how media misrepresentation and under representation of women results in a leadership gap and the silencing of difference.”