THE HOUSING QUESTION
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disingenuous to say, as Ministers and Coalition Members
too often say, that unwilling Local Authorities know
best and should be let alone. Such Local Authorities
know the facts perfectly well. The housing conditions
and misery of the poorer of their constituents are
patent everywhere. They know the facts but will not
apply the remedy—because they believe that, as
taxpayers, their pockets will be touched, and because
Councillors are often slum-owners, or the friends of
slum-owners, and know that new houses will lower
the value of their own ignoble property. They prefer
that the working classes shall remain miserable and in
unhealthy conditions, rather than that they themselves
and their friends should have to pay for improvements.
All honour to the many Local Authorities and to
the innumerable Councillors who have worked with a
will to press on with their Housing Schemes. But
there are others, and it is hypocritical to deny it. And
the Coalition Government have protected them in
their criminal neglect.
NOTES ON THE FOREGOING.
The following quotations from the Housing Debate
of 13th March, 1922, give an indication of the present
Minister of Health’s complaisant attitude towards
private enterprise in cottage building, and what
other people, including some of the supporters of his
Government, think about it.