8 Aug 2025

UK homelessness minister resigns over claims she evicted tenants to raise rent

9:01 am on 8 August 2025

By Sachin Ravikumar

Rushanara Ali MP Labour Party for Bethnal Green and members of her party surrounded by microphones being interviewed by the press, ExCel Centre London United Kingdom, on July 4 2024. Part of the UK General Election count for the Tower Hamlets borough.
Rushanara Ali deputee du parti Labour pour Bethnal Green et des membres de son parti entoures de microphones en train d etre interviewes par la presse, ExCel Centre Londres Royaume Uni, le 4 juillet 2024. Dans le cadre du depouillement des elections generales pour l arrondissement de Tower Hamlets. (Photo by Emil Lombardo / Hans Lucas via AFP)

Rushanara Ali. Photo: AFP / Emil Lombardo

Britain's minister for homelessness has resigned after claims she evicted tenants from a property she owns and then increased the rent by hundreds of pounds.

Rushanara Ali, a junior minister in the ministry of housing, said in her resignation letter to Prime Minister Keir Starmer that she had followed all the legal requirements "at all times" but that continuing in her role would have distracted from the work of the government.

Her exit represents an embarrassing blow for Starmer's Labour government, which trails Nigel Farage's right-wing Reform UK party in opinion polls just over a year after winning a landslide election victory.

Ali is the fourth Labour minister to step down under pressure following the exits of the transport minister, the anti-corruption minister and a junior health minister for separate reasons. Others have left the government over policy disagreements.

"Keir Starmer promised a government of integrity - but has instead presided over a government of hypocrisy and self-service," the opposition Conservative party's chairman Kevin Hollinrake said, adding it was right that Ali had quit.

Ali, who has spoken out previously against tenants being exploited and "unreasonable rent increases", evicted four tenants from her four-bedroom house in east London last year as the property was being sold, the i Paper reported on Wednesday.

Just weeks later, the property, which had a monthly rent of 3,300 pounds, was re-listed for 700 pounds more in rent after no buyer was found, and later rented out at the higher rent, the report added.

The end of rental contracts is considered one of the leading causes of homelessness in Britain, and the government is preparing a renters' rights bill which will ban landlords from re-listing a property for higher rent within six months after eviction.

"I wanted to make it clear that at all times I have followed all relevant legal requirements," Ali said in her letter to Starmer. "I believe I took my responsibilities and duties seriously, and the facts demonstrate this."

-Reuters

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