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“WE’VE HAD ENOUGH.” Parliament Erupts as Lee Anderson Drops Explosive Speech—But Keir Starmer’s Response Leaves Everyone STUNNED

In one of the most explosive speeches of the year, Lee Anderson unleashed a chilling warning about the state of Britain’s streets. He accused HMOs of being transformed into dumping grounds for criminals, drug users, and illegal migrants, while local families are being pushed out of their own neighborhoods. Anderson’s fiery speech painted a terrifying picture: schoolgirls changing routes out of fear, nurses being forced out of housing, and “young fighting-age men” being placed into residential streets across towns like Ashfield.

Outspoken MP Lee Anderson defects to Reform UK - BBC News

In a fiery adjournment debate that has ignited fierce debate across the UK, Reform UK MP Lee Anderson delivered one of the most passionate speeches of the parliamentary session on the impact of Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs) in his Ashfield constituency and beyond. Speaking on April 28 or 29, 2026, Anderson painted a stark picture of communities under strain, accusing unregulated HMOs of becoming “dumping grounds” for criminals, drug users, and asylum seekers, while local families face displacement.

The Ashfield MP, standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Reform Deputy Leader Richard Tice in spirit, told the House of Commons that he had been contacted by hundreds of families over six years about the effects of HMOs. “Anybody can set up an HMO overnight. No qualifications, no training, no checks,” he said. Investors from afar buy cheap terrace houses and fill them with tenants, leading to what he described as rising anti-social behaviour and crime.

Anderson highlighted specific concerns in Ashfield: young girls changing their routes to school out of fear, nurses being evicted from HMOs to make way for migrants, and streets once considered safe now feeling transformed. He referred to “young fighting-age men” from “backward cultures” being placed in residential areas, claiming many women feel more unsafe than ever. “We’ve had enough,” he declared, demanding an end to using HMOs for migrants and immediate action to detain and deport those without legal right to remain.

Starmer’s Speech Reactions

Does Lee Anderson understand how the internet works? - The New World

The speech came amid Labour’s efforts to close asylum hotels, a policy Anderson warned would push more individuals into already strained HMO accommodations without proper planning. “The hotels are now being emptied. And where are these young men going to go? … into a HMO on a street near people in this chamber,” he warned. He also criticised both current and previous governments for allowing companies to secure long-term contracts for housing asylum seekers, driving up rents and contributing to local homelessness.

Calls for Regulation and Reform

Anderson acknowledged that HMOs, when properly managed, can serve key workers like nurses and single professionals. He cited a local operator in Ashfield who has housed thousands with zero anti-social incidents. However, he argued the core issue is poor regulation: lack of background checks, licensing for managers, and limits on HMO density in specific areas.

He proposed practical solutions including mandatory licensing and training for HMO owners and managers, enhanced safeguarding tools, DBS checks, and statutory caps on concentrations of HMOs. His central demand: stop placing illegal migrants in HMOs and prioritise detention and deportation “for the sake of our young women and girls.”

The debate drew interventions from other MPs, including calls for Article 4 directions to control HMO proliferation locally. Critics inside and outside Parliament accused Anderson of inflammatory language, particularly references to “backward cultures” and turning areas into “ghettos.” Supporters praised him for voicing constituent concerns ignored by mainstream parties.

Keir Starmer’s Response: The Stunning Twist

Could an HMO be the budget solution to London living? - Eastbank - Property  Development and Management in East and South London

The real shock for many observers came not during Anderson’s speech itself — which occurred in a relatively sparsely attended adjournment debate — but in how Prime Minister Keir Starmer and the government have engaged (or not) with these issues in broader exchanges. In related PMQs and statements, Starmer has dismissed Reform’s attacks as “dog whistle”  politics and stand-up comedy, while defending Labour’s border and housing strategies.

In one notable clash, when pressed on migration figures and deportations, Starmer hit back sharply at Anderson and Reform UK, accusing the party of lacking substance and pointing to internal controversies. Rather than directly addressing the HMO specifics in that moment, the Prime Minister pivoted to Labour’s record on reducing small boat crossings (claiming significant drops in certain periods) and efforts to clear asylum backlogs while ending expensive hotel contracts.

This approach — factual rebuttals on statistics combined with personal jabs at Reform’s leadership and rhetoric — left parts of the chamber and viewers stunned. Some saw it as a calm, evidence-based dismissal that refused to legitimise what Labour views as divisive fearmongering. Others interpreted the Prime Minister’s composure and redirection as evading the gritty local realities Anderson raised, effectively flipping the debate from policy detail to  political point-scoring. The silence that followed in some quarters reflected deep polarisation: one side viewing Starmer as responsibly refusing to inflame tensions, the other as out of touch with working-class communities feeling the pressure.

Government figures emphasise that asylum accommodation decisions balance humanitarian obligations with value for money, and that local authorities handle planning issues like HMOs. Labour points to falling hotel usage and investments in faster processing, while critics argue dispersal into communities without adequate support creates exactly the problems Anderson described.

Broader Context: The HMO and Migration Crisis

Prime Minister Keir Starmer will fight any attempt to replace him, friends  say - BBC News

HMOs have long been a flashpoint in towns across the Midlands and North. Planning rules allow conversion with limited oversight in many areas, and the asylum housing system — under strain from small boat arrivals and backlogs — has increasingly relied on private providers. Companies like Serco (referred to as “Ciro” in the speech) hold contracts for dispersal accommodation.

Data shows mixed trends: government reports note reductions in small boat crossings year-on-year in early 2026 compared to peaks, yet daily arrivals continue, and public concern over integration, crime, and housing competition remains high in affected areas. Ashfield, like many former mining towns, has seen economic challenges compounded by these pressures.

Nurses and key workers facing eviction highlight a tension: prioritising asylum accommodation can displace vulnerable locals in tight rental markets. Crime statistics in some HMO-dense areas show rises in anti-social behaviour, though causation is fiercely debated — poverty, poor integration, and under-policing are all cited as factors.

 Political Fallout and Public Reaction

Anderson’s speech has been widely shared on social media and GB News, boosting Reform UK’s narrative as the only party addressing “the state of our country.” Clips of his passionate delivery have racked up views, with many commenters echoing “We’ve had enough.”

Labour and opposition parties counter that Reform exaggerates for electoral gain ahead of local elections, and that solutions require cross-government work on housing supply, integration, and international returns agreements — not inflammatory rhetoric. Starmer’s team maintains their plan is working: smashing smuggling gangs (though numbers remain contested), clearing backlogs, and building homes.

The “stunning twist” lies in the contrast: Anderson’s raw, constituent-driven outburst versus Starmer’s measured, sometimes mocking parliamentary replies. It encapsulates the deep divide in British politics — one side demanding immediate, tough action on borders and communities; the other emphasising process, statistics, and rejecting “dog whistles.”

What Happens Next?

The government faces pressure to respond substantively to HMO regulation calls. Local councils are already using tools like Article 4 directions in hotspots. Broader reform of licensing and tenant vetting could gain traction if public anger grows.

Starmer’s Speech Reactions

For Anderson and Reform, the speech reinforces their insurgent position. For Starmer’s Labour, the challenge is proving their policies deliver safer streets and fairer housing without alienating their working-class base.

Nineteen years after some migration debates began dominating headlines, issues like HMO dispersal show no sign of fading. Whether Anderson’s warnings prove prescient or overstated, the eruption in Parliament has forced the conversation into the open — leaving the public to judge whose response truly addresses Britain’s streets in 2026.

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