Welsh Conservatives will this afternoon debate the Welsh Labour Governmentâs decision to scrap the Right to Buy Scheme in Wales.
The debate calls on the National Assembly to recognise the huge impact the scheme has had since it was introduced in 1980, with 130,000 Welsh families having taken advantage of the chance to get on the property ladder for the first time.
Welsh Conservatives have opposed the Welsh Governmentâs decision to revoke the Right to Buy, and have instead called on ministers to increase the target for annual house-building in Wales to 14,000 homes per year.
Speaking ahead of the debate, Shadow Cabinet Secretary for Housing, David Melding, said:
âLabourâs decision to revoke the Right to Buy in Wales will undermine social mobility, depriving thousands of families of an opportunity to get on the housing ladder for the first time.
âItâs easy for government ministers to lecture, but who are they to deny hardworking families an opportunity to own their own homes?
âThe fact is, there is a shortage of affordable housing in Wales because Labour hasnât built enough affordable homes, and not because council tenants have had a chance to buy theirs.
âThe Right to Buy Scheme doesnât deplete the housing stock, it empowers people to take a stake in the home in which they already live. But our proposals, which ring-fence the money raised for new social housing, will provide more homes and more opportunities for people languishing on Labourâs waiting lists.â
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