Advertisement
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL: Just £9.99 for the next 8 weeks
SUBSCRIBE
Housing

'Infuriating and disgraceful': Labour MP Jas Athwal faces fresh calls to resign amid care home row

Labour MP Jas Athwal faces calls to resign over alleged failures at a children's home he owns

Labour MP Jas Athwal speaking in the House of Commons

Labour MP Jas Athwal speaking in the House of Commons (Screengrab/House of Commons)

Labour MP Jas Athwal has faced fresh calls to resign after an investigation found that he is the landlord for a children’s home with “serious failures”. 

An investigation published by The Londoner on Sunday (27 September) found that the private children’s home reportedly had several issues, including a child going “missing” from the home, furniture in “poor condition” and a child reportedly being “stabbed” in the property. 

The investigation, described as containing “disgraceful” allegations, comes after Athwal faced calls to resign in September over his “mouldy” and “ant-infested” flats. Reports have claimed that Athwal, who owns 15 rental flats, is the biggest landlord in the House of Commons. 

The Londoner’s report on the Labour MP for Ilford South claimed an Ofsted inspection at the children’s home in August found “serious and widespread failures that meant children and young people are not protected” at the property.

A 2019 Ofsted inspection at the home, which first opened in 2013, reportedly mentioned “bullying and intimidation” at the home, which allegedly led to a child being stabbed. 

A September 2023 inspection of the home, which is run by Heartwood Care Group, found that it contained “bare and uninviting” rooms, furniture in “poor condition” which posed a hazard, and windows in need of repair. It added that frequency of “missing-from-home incidents” was “a cause for concern” and that staff did not follow proper protocols for when a child goes missing.

Advertisement
Advertisement

An Ofsted inspection in August 2024 claimed that one child staff had “failed to monitor properly” went missing from the home. It added that children looked after at the property had been subject to disproportionate “physical interventions” from staff, whom the investigation claimed were “poorly trained and lacking knowledge”.

The August 2024 report concluded that management at the children’s home “fail to learn from past experiences” and accepted children to the home “who they cannot keep safe”. It added that the safety for one child at the home had “deteriorated since they moved in”.

After the August inspection, Ofsted reportedly issued a compliance notice to the home, which are given to homes failing to meet their legal duties to the children in their care. In September 2024, Ofsted inspectors returned to the home, where improvements were reportedly found, and the compliance notices were removed.

The investigation also alleged that Jas Athwal had a personal relationship with the owner of Heartwood Care Group, Daljit Johal, with Johal reportedly endorsing Athwal before the 2019 general election.

The pair had also allegedly interacted in public Facebook posts on multiple occasions.

The Londoner alleged that as Redbridge Council – which Athwal was leader of from 2014 to 2024 – paid “millions of pounds” to Heartwood Care Group for housing vulnerable children, the fact that Athwal knew Johal on a personal basis and owned the building raised “the possibility of a serious conflict of interest”. 

Advertisement

A council spokesperson told the news outlet that Athwal had no obligation to declare the relationship and that “no children from Redbridge have been placed at this residential home”. 

In a statement to the Big Issue, a spokesperson from Heartwood Care Group wrote: “The Londoner story is seriously inaccurate, defamatory of Mr Johal and his organisations, and is irresponsible journalism done in a headlong rush to meet a launch deadline. There is no improper relationship between Mr Johal and Mr Athwal, and to suggest so is just plain wrong.

“The care home in question has been rated as ‘Good’ by Ofsted on the majority of occasions since 2014, including in 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2021 and 2022. However, recently it has experienced a challenging period because of sector-wide recruitment difficulties.

“All improvements required by Ofsted in August 2024 have been addressed speedily by Heartwood, with the regulator reporting that the compliance notices were met by the end of September 2024, as the Londoner is well aware.

“Ofsted stated on 24 September 2024: ‘The provider has made good progress in addressing the requirements that were set under the compliance notices. As a result of this good progress, both notices have now been met.'”

The Heartwood Care Group statement continued: “Since 2013, around 90% of the services provided to Redbridge Council were for 16-plus and 18-plus outreach services that do not relate to the care home referenced, but The Londoner omitted to state this. So, the financial figures quoted, and how they are represented, are seriously misleading. Given the multiple corrections the publication has had to make to its article today there are serious questions about the quality of their journalism.”

Advertisement

In a phone call with The Londoner, Athwal reportedly said he knew “nothing about” the children’s home in the building he owns and that he has “never been to that property”, which he said had been leased for about 12 years. 

Jas Athwal wrote in a statement on X: “I wholeheartedly reject any suggestion, as per a media report today, of a conflict of interest in the leasing of a property to Heartwood Care Group which was made entirely on regular commercial terms and declared fully in accordance with council rules.”

He continued: “I have no further commercial relationship with the tenant beyond leasing the property. The operation of children’s homes is rightfully overseen by Ofsted, whose regulation and enforcement I fully support.”

‘Disgraceful’ allegations

Campaigners and rental charities have branded the allegations against Athwal “disgraceful”, adding that it is “vital” for vulnerable children to live in safe homes. 

Ben Twomey, chief executive of Generation Rent, told the Big Issue: “The recent allegations about Jas Athwal MP’s mismanaged care home are disgraceful. Children only get one childhood, so it is vital that they live in safe and happy homes. 

“This story follows from reports that properties which Athwal is renting out are infested with ants and mould, with tenants afraid to ask for repairs due to a fear of eviction.”

Advertisement

Twomey continued: “Experiences like these for tenants are sadly all too common. There are millions of private renters living in homes with mould and damp, which is a major risk to their health. 

“Too many landlords get away with inaction, and it is infuriating to see a sitting MP profiting from this misery. The government’s Renters’ Rights Bill must pass soon into law so that unscrupulous landlords are made accountable, and they should think hard about how to make sure no MP or landlord is failing tenants and children in the meantime.”

London Renters’ Union (LRU) has called for Athwal to resign after the latest allegations reported by the Londoner, adding that the MP has profited from the “rigged” housing industry in the UK. 

“After yet more allegations concerning poor conditions in buildings Jas Athwal owns, there remain unanswered questions about the conditions faced by tenants in Athwal’s residential properties,” a spokesperson for the LRU told the Big Issue. 

“How can renters trust this government to deliver change when the people who govern us profit from our rigged system and evade accountability? We cannot have rogue landlords in parliament. Jas Athwal must resign.”

The Big Issue has contacted Jas Athwal for comment. 

Advertisement

Do you have a story to tell or opinions to share about this? Get in touch and tell us more. Big Issue exists to give homeless and marginalised people the opportunity to earn an income. To support our work buy a copy of the magazine or get the app from the App Store or Google Play.

Big Issue is demanding an end to extreme poverty. Will you ask your MP to join us?

Advertisement

Buy a Big Issue Vendor Support Kit

This Christmas, give a Big Issue vendor the tools to keep themselves warm, dry, fed, earning and progressing.

Recommended for you

View all
‘It’s an absolute crisis’: Someone falls into homelessness in London every seven and a half minutes
homeless tents on Oxford Street in London
Homelessness

‘It’s an absolute crisis’: Someone falls into homelessness in London every seven and a half minutes

'This could be a lifesaver': Homeless pods equipped with heart monitors open for Christmas
HOMELESSNESS

'This could be a lifesaver': Homeless pods equipped with heart monitors open for Christmas

A young mum was left to rot in a home not fit for animals – and everyone needs to know about it
Daniel Hewitt

A young mum was left to rot in a home not fit for animals – and everyone needs to know about it

Homeless woman reunites with couple who 'changed her life' when they gave her a bed for the night
Mark Bryant greets Yasmina at the door of his Whitley Bay home
Homelessness

Homeless woman reunites with couple who 'changed her life' when they gave her a bed for the night

Most Popular

Read All
Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits
Renters: A mortgage lender's window advertising buy-to-let products
1.

Renters pay their landlords' buy-to-let mortgages, so they should get a share of the profits

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal
Pound coins on a piece of paper with disability living allowancve
2.

Exclusive: Disabled people are 'set up to fail' by the DWP in target-driven disability benefits system, whistleblowers reveal

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over
next dwp cost of living payment 2023
3.

Cost of living payment 2024: Where to get help now the scheme is over

Strike dates 2023: From train drivers to NHS doctors, here are the dates to know
4.

Strike dates 2023: From train drivers to NHS doctors, here are the dates to know