Rayner Defends Approach at Grenfell Tower Meeting Amid Dismantling Plan
Angela Rayner stands by her handling of a meeting with bereaved families and survivors as the government announces a gradual dismantling of Grenfell Tower.
Angela Rayner defended her conduct during a meeting held last week with bereaved families and survivors of the Grenfell Tower fire, amid the announcement that the 24-storey tower will be gradually dismantled.
During the meeting on Wednesday, Rayner stated that the tower, which remains structurally stable only due to additional protective measures, would be taken down progressively following advice from engineers who warned that its condition would deteriorate over time.
The decision, formally announced on Friday, comes nearly eight years after the Grenfell Tower fire in 2017, which claimed the lives of seventy-two people.
At the meeting, some attendees described the session as a "car crash," while Kimia Zabihyan from Grenfell Next of Kin observed that the atmosphere was "charged" but noted that Rayner appeared to have acted with the best of intentions.
In contrast, representatives from Grenfell United stated that none of those present supported the plan and described the apparent disregard of their wishes as "disgraceful and unforgivable."
Speaking on BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, Rayner said she did not feel her approach during the meeting was aggressive, adding that she would be sincerely upset if anyone had perceived it as such.
She acknowledged the difficult nature of the discussions, noting that she had participated in multiple meetings with affected families and community groups.
Rayner explained that, after weighing these conversations alongside the engineering report, the government determined that the only viable course was to begin dismantling the tower while planning for a lasting memorial on the site.
The Grenfell Tower Memorial Commission is currently consulting on memorial plans, with five design teams shortlisted.
The winning team is expected to submit a planning application in late twenty twenty-six.
The Grenfell Tower fire, which originated from a faulty refrigerator in a fourth-floor flat and spread rapidly due to flammable cladding, was later attributed to a series of failures within government and the construction industry, according to the findings of a public inquiry concluded in September.