Domestic Abuse Joint Tenancies 2025-07-07

2025-07-07

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Response quality

Questions & Answers

Q1 Partial Answer
Alison Hume Lab
Scarborough and Whitby
Context
The Renters’ Rights Bill allows individuals to end joint tenancies, supporting domestic abuse victims to leave their abuser if they share a home. A constituent named Molly is trapped in the house where she was violently attacked and cannot move due to her landlord's refusal to take her abuser off the lease.
My constituent Molly is trapped in the house where she was violently attacked in front of her children. She is confined to living upstairs, because going into the room downstairs triggers her post-traumatic stress disorder. Despite the perpetrator of this abuse rightfully being in prison and having a restraining order of five years, Molly’s landlord has told her that they cannot take him off the lease, so she cannot move. Can the Minister confirm that the Government are taking steps to ensure that victims of domestic abuse, like Molly, can move on with their lives?
I thank my hon. Friend for raising Molly’s case—our hearts go out to her and her children for the trauma they are living with. Her case raises many issues, including the need for early intervention in domestic abuse cases, the need to improve therapeutic support for victims and, as my hon. Friend has said, the desperate need for reform of the rules around property rights in cases of economic and domestic abuse, so that women are not trapped. I cannot give my hon. Friend immediate answers on all those issues today, but I can promise that they will all be included in our upcoming strategy on violence against women and girls.
Assessment & feedback
The Minister did not provide specific actions or commitments to help victims like Molly leave joint tenancies immediately.
Promised Future Action
Response accuracy