“I had my first speech outside Number 10 as prime minister all planned out,” Jeremy Corbyn tells me. “I was going to announce homelessness in Britain ends now, next week no-one will be sleeping rough.” He is sitting on a sofa at the offices of his Peace & Justice Project in Finsbury Park, deep in his north London constituency. “Not bad for a first policy, huh?” he asks, flashing his trademark wry grin. As it happened, the 2019 general election led to a landslide victory for Boris Johnson’s Conservatives. More than 2,000 people still sleep rough across the UK every night.

  • cresspacito [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    "more than 2000" rough sleepers? Surely that's too little. I've seen more on a single walk through central London.

    • Circra [he/him]
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      2 years ago

      It is. Local councils manage their own rough sleeper counts and there are incentives to report as low a number as they can. Therefore they all run their counts in the middle of November when temp is so low rough sleeping on the streets is practically a death sentence and they really, really do not bother to count properly even then.