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Domestic abuse victims won’t face homelessness for speaking out under new law | News Politics

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The proposed changes will apply to those living in social housing (Picture: John Keeble/Getty Images)

A new law being brought to parliament today aims to close a loophole which has meant domestic abuse victims living in social housing feel forced to stay in harm’s way – or risk homelessness.

Currently, there is no way for landlords to evict abusers before their victim has already left the home.

And in joint tenancies, victims who wish to leave the home they share with the perpetrator can only get out by ending the tenancy entirely.

According to government statistics, almost 40,000 households in the UK were forced to find a new home after losing their previous one due to domestic abuse in 2024/25.

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Part of the new Social Housing Bill, which returns to Parliament for its second reading today, will aim to give greater security to social renters at risk.

It will mean landlords and court can force perpetrators to leave without simultaneously threatening their victims with the same fate.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said: ‘No victim of domestic abuse should face the awful choice between staying in danger or losing their home.

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‘This government is putting that right, so perpetrators are forced out and survivors and their children can stay safely in the homes and communities they know and love.’

The Bill will also close a loophole which allows domestic abusers to exploit the Notice to Quit.

These notices are used by tenants to inform landlords when they intend to end a rolling contract – but in the hands of perpetrators, they can be wielded to threaten their victim with homelessness.

Housing Secretary Steve Reed, who is leading the new bill (Picture: Dan Kitwood/PA Wire)

Under the Social Housing Bill, any Notice to Quit served by a perpetrator will not end the joint tenancy while the court proceedings are still going on.

Courts will also require landlords to provide suitable alternative accommodation if it is not appropriate for victims to stay.

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Veronica Oakeshott, the Head of External Affairs at Women’s Aid, said the new measures had long been a focus of campaigning by the organisation.

She added: ‘While ultimately we hope the measures will go further to enable more survivors to qualify, this is an important start.’

Housing Secretary Steve Reed said the current situation is a ‘moral failure’ which allowed abusers to use homes as a ‘weapon of control’.

He said: ‘Victims of domestic abuse have faced an impossible choice – stay in danger or make themselves homeless.

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‘This is a moral failure this government is determined to end and these changes are deeds not words that put victims first, give landlords the powers they need, and make sure perpetrators can no longer use housing as a weapon of control.’

The Social Housing Bill will also introduce reforms to the Right to Buy system in an effort to stem the flow of social homes into private hands while not stopping it entirely.

Renters will become eligible for the scheme after 10 years, rather than the current three, while newly built social homes will be protected for 35 years.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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