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Theresa May's pledge to "fix the broken housing market" lies in tatters after she left herself scrambling to find the eighth Tory housing minister in eight years.

The Prime Minister promoted Dominic Raab to be Brexit Secretary after he spent just six months in the job.

He was replaced by DWP minister Kit Malthouse - who is now the third housing minister since the Grenfell Tower disaster only 13 months ago.

He is the fifth person to hold the role since 2015 and the eighth since 2010.

Shadow Housing Secretary John Healey slammed Tory ministers.

He said: "Dominic Raab's move means that Theresa May is on her fourth housing minister in just two years as Prime Minister.

(Image: Hounslow Chronicle) (Image: Jack Taylor) (Image: PA)

"There have been eight different housing ministers in the last eight years.

"This is no way to run a Government.”

Alexandra Morris, managing director of online letting agent MakeUrMove, said: “It is hugely disappointing that the housing brief is once again the poor relation. We’re staring down the barrel of a very real housing crisis.

"The Government needs to make housing a priority, and this starts with appointing an expert on housing with a firm commitment to the role."

Trussle mortgage broker founder Ishaan Malhi added: "We desperately need not only innovation, but continuity of leadership and a strong hand willing to be brave on policy.

“I only hope the new Housing Minister can stay in the job long enough to have an impact.”

(Image: PA)

Mrs May declared it was her "personal mission" to fix the housing crisis and pledged to build 300,000 homes a year overall by the mid-2020s.

But just 39,350 homes started being built in the three months to March - a fall of 8% on a year earlier.

It also emerged just two new council homes were started every day, while the number of housing association homes started between fell 14% to 5,230.

(Image: AFP)

Earlier this year the Tory government quietly dropped its key pledge to 'fix the broken housing market' from official plans.

Used by Tory ministers since at least 2016, 'Fixing our broken housing market' was the title of a government White Paper in February last year.

The 2017 Tory manifesto also vowed to "fix the dysfunctional housing market" before the Prime Minister used the phrase in her October conference speech.

But the slogan vanished from the Housing Ministry's annual 'single departmental plan' - where it was previously objective number one.

It has been replaced by "deliver the homes the country needs" in the new plan.

The full roll call of Tory housing ministers

July 2018 - ?

Jan 2018 - July 2018 Dominic Raab

Jun 2017 - Jan 2018 Alok Sharma

July 2016 - June 2017 Gavin Barwell

July 2014 - July 2016 Brandon Lewis

Oct 2013 - July 2014 Kris Hopkins

Sept 2012 - Oct 2013 Mark Prisk

May 2010 - Sept 2012 Grant Shapps