The Free
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Active until | 1996 |
---|---|
Origin | Germany |
Record labels | Dance Pool |
Albums | Crazy Worlds |
Genres | Eurodance |
Pop Music | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1791682 |
About The Free
The Free were a German eurodance group from the 1990s. They were produced by Felix J. Gauder and Olaf Roberto Bossi.
Henry Kissinger's Cambodia legacy of bombs and chaos

... Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair described the ex-US secretary of state as an artist of diplomacy, who was motivated by " a genuine love of The Free world and the need to protect it"...
TikTok: US judge blocks Montana's ban citing free speech

...By Mariko OiBusiness reporterA US judge has blocked Montana s ban on TikTok, saying it violated The Free speech rights of users...
Meta takes down China-based network of thousands of fake accounts

... The case is part of a larger debate about over whether the US government works with tech companies to unduly restrict The Free speech of social media users...
Pressure grows for ban on new leasehold flats

... Campaigner Harry Scoffin, who launched The Free Leaseholders group last week to strengthen the bill, said he understood some Tory MPs were also concerned the bill did not go far enough on flats and were considering proposing their own changes...
Omid Scobie royal book: More like Action Replay than Endgame

... You can see more royal stories in The Free BBC Royal Watch newsletter emailed each week - or...
Royal Family: Omid Scobie book Endgame promises to detail turmoil

... See more royal stories in The Free BBC Royal Watch newsletter, emailed each week - or...
For some Israeli hostage families, the painful wait goes on

... The Free shop needed be kept stocked...
Argentina election: Javier Milei's radical proposals face test of reality

... " I am going to be aligned with the United States, Israel, and The Free world, " he said...
Pressure grows for ban on new leasehold flats
By Becky MortonPolitical reporter
The government is facing growing calls to ban new leasehold flats in England and Wales.
It has said a ban on the sale of new leasehold houses will be added to a bill, which has been introduced to Parliament, as soon as possible.
But Minister Baroness Penn said abolishing leasehold for flats was " more complicated" and reforms would be taken forward at a later date.
Campaigners, Labour and some Tories want leasehold to be scrapped entirely.
Under the current System leaseholders often have to pay ground rent and expensive maintenance charges.
This is because they only own the lease, which gives them The Right to use the property for a fixed term, but not The Land it is built on.
A bill, which was introduced in Parliament on Monday, would make it easier and cheaper for homeowners to extend their lease or buy their freehold. At The Moment this can be a complicated and expensive process, often costing thousands of pounds including legal fees.
However, The Bill did not include a ban on new leasehold flats.
Campaign groups want a commonhold System - where occupants jointly own and take responsibility for their buildings without an expiring lease - to replace leasehold for new flats.
Raising the issue in The House of Lords, Labour's shadow spokeswoman for housing Baroness Taylor said: " Of course we welcome the reform of leasehold but with five million leasehold properties in England, 70% of which are flats, there is disappointment that they are not included in The Bill . "
Baroness Penn, a junior minister in The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, told peers reforming leasehold for flats was " inherently more complicated" than for houses as they required an arrangement to facilitate management of The Building .
" For flats, the government remains committed to reinvigorating commonhold to give developers and homeowners a viable alternative to leasehold show they choose it, " She Said .
She added: " We will be taking forward at a later date reforms to the commonhold System to allow that to replace the leasehold System . "
Conservative peer Lord Young, a former minister, said he welcomed The Bill but that it did not do what Housing Secretary Michael Gove originally Promised - to " liberate people" from " an outdated, feudal System ".
He suggested peers could amend the legislation to deliver this aim.
Another Tory peer, Lord Cormack also suggested The House of Lords could " put right what [Mr Gove] has Not Yet got right".
Baroness Penn insisted The Bill was focused on " helping leaseholders now" by making existing leases fairer and more affordable.
Campaigner Harry Scoffin, who launched The Free Leaseholders group last week to strengthen The Bill , said he understood some Tory MPs were also concerned The Bill did not go far enough on flats and were considering proposing their own changes.
Labour has said it would back such moves but without government support they are unlikely to succeed.
The Party has said it would make commonhold " the default tenure for all new properties" if it wins power.
Mr Scoffin said: " It is clear that it will be up to The Next administration to bring commonhold out of the Deep Freeze , but it's not Too Late for this government to require 'share of freehold' on new apartment schemes, which is a tried and tested arrangement that gives residents control of their costs and service providers from Day One .
" Such a positive change is simple to do and would be cost neutral to the Treasury. "
Under share of freehold, a flat still has a lease but there is greater control over how The Building is managed.
The majority of leasehold homes in England are flats and the proportion of new-build houses sold as leaseholds has fallen from a 15% high in 2016 to just 1% in December 2022.
On Tuesday it emerged a Promised ban on the sale of new leasehold houses.
However, the government said this would be added at a later stage in its passage through Parliament.
Baroness Penn told peers leasehold reform was " complex" and " we're taking The Time to get things right".
She added: " I do understand the desirability of bringing forward these clauses as soon as possible for Parliament's scrutiny and that's what the government intends to do. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com