By now, you have doubtless heard of the Grenfell Tower fire in London, where perhaps as many as 100 people in a public housing tower died in a ferocious blaze.
The facts at this point are that the residents had been complaining about potential fire hazards for years, and the fire was likely made much worse by the addition of cosmetic cladding that was both flammable (so flammable that it has been banned in the US) and functioned as a chimney for the flames.
The indications are that the cladding was added because the building was located in the very tony Kensington borough, and they wanted to improve the views.
Theresa May should be thanking her lucky stars that this didn't happen before the election, because her housing/fire safety minister specifically argued against better fire regulations, and when May initially went to the scene of the fire, she refused to meet with the former residents of the apartments.
By comparison, Jeremy Corbyn visited with the former residents, and promised that they would be told what happened.
Heck, even the singer Adele went to talk to the fire victims.
If this had happened a week before the elections, Jeremy Corbyn would now be the Prime Minister.
BTW, Corbyn has already made a proposal to help the people displaced by the fires, he wants to put them in the empty flats in the area that are owned by rich people who use London real estate to launder their money:
Empty flats in North Kensington should be "requisitioned if necessary" for people left homeless by the Grenfell Tower fire, Jeremy Corbyn says.It a good solution, and it is precisely the sort of action that makes Tory heads explode, which makes it even more delicious.
The Labour leader has also said he is "very angry" that so many lives were lost in a deadly tower block fire.
………
And he told MPs on Thursday: "The south part of Kensington is incredibly wealthy, it's the wealthiest part of the country.
"The ward where this fire took place is, I think the poorest ward in the whole country.
"And properties must be found, requisitioned if necessary, in order to make sure those residents do get re-housed locally.
"It cannot be acceptable that in London you have luxury buildings and luxury flats kept as land banking for the future while the homeless and the poor look for somewhere to live."
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