Labour’s grand promise to deliver 1.5 million new homes over the next five years rings increasingly hollow as the capital and the rest of the UK suffer from some of the lowest levels of housebuilding in over a decade. Under Labour’s watch, London has seen a catastrophic decline, with recent figures revealing the lowest number of private housebuilding starts since 2009. In the first quarter of 2025, only 1,210 new private homes were initiated across the city—a staggeringly small fraction of the government’s quarterly target of 22,000. Alarmingly, 23 out of London’s 33 boroughs reported no new housing starts at all during this period, exposing a widespread crisis that Labour fails to address.

This housing drought hits particularly hard in areas like Kingston upon Thames, where new builds have fallen to their lowest point since 2009. The bleak forecasts suggest this trend will only worsen, with just 7,100 private homes projected to be completed across London in 2027 and 2028—yet most boroughs, including Bromley, Lewisham, Hackney, and Kingston, anticipate no new developments at all. Such figures lay bare the chasm between Labour’s hollow promises of 88,000 homes annually in London alone and the grim reality on the ground.

Multiple factors, exacerbated under Labour’s tenure, have stifled housebuilding prospects. Developers point to a host of crippling issues—after-Grenfell fire safety regulations piling on delays, rising construction costs, stagnant sale prices, a shrinking pool of affluent off-plan buyers, and persistently high interest rates. These supply constraints are worsened by a long-term decline in housing demand. Since 2017, misguided policies and market stagnation have drained sales volumes, creating a vicious cycle where even regulatory reforms appear insufficient to ignite building activity. While the government has tools such as fiscal incentives, it’s far from clear if Labour’s administration will muster the political resolve necessary to actually implement measures that stimulate demand and rebuild confidence in the market.

Nationwide, the outlook is equally dismal. In the year leading up to June 2024, new housing starts plummeted below 88,000—the lowest since 2009—and an eye-watering drop from over 190,000 the previous year. Planning approvals have also hit multi-year lows, with only 230,000 units granted permission—fewer than in recent years and since 2014. Industry bodies like the Home Builders Federation warn that this decline will worsen the housing shortage, pushing up prices and rents as supply dwindles further.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan’s recent comparison of the current housebuilding slowdown to the 2008 banking crisis reveals the depth of the failure. Despite record levels of affordable homes initiated in 2022-23, the latest figures indicate a stark reduction in housing starts supported by City Hall, with just 2,358 new homes begun in 2023-24. Khan blames previous government policies for hampering the construction sector, but Labour’s own failures have only deepened the crisis.

Critics argue that Labour’s control over London has coincided with some of the worst housing delivery figures in recent history. Their proposed Planning Bill, aimed at streamlining approvals, remains untested and unproven, offering little hope for reversing these declines. The scale of the housing emergency demands decisive action—regulatory reform, targeted financial incentives, and demand stimulation—that Labour has yet to deliver. Without such reforms, their lofty housing targets will remain nothing more than empty promises, as the city and the country continue to suffer from Labour’s continued mismanagement and neglect.

Source: Noah Wire Services