Mr Boles said open land would be built on in exchange for commitments to defend greenbelt spaces.
But maybe Grantham's current MP Nick Boles has pointed the historians in one direction.
Increasing the amount of developed land by a third would address the housing shortage, according to Planning Minister Nick Boles.
Mr Boles, sympathised with the residents of Broughton and agreed to visit the village but could offer no solace.
BBC: Kettering MP says planning loophole is spoiling village
Minister Nick Boles told MPs it could be retained if "everybody is happy".
Mr Gray, Conservative member for North Wiltshire, said the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Planning, Nick Boles, had contacted him.
Mr Boles also told Newsnight that having a house with a garden was a "basic moral right, like healthcare and education".
Mr Boles is the parliamentary private secretary to Schools Minister Nick Gibb, in the education department which has oversight over Sure Start.
Now Mr Boles has set out what the government's proposals will entail.
Workers in the school's cafeteria work on a contract basis, Boles said.
In his first interview about his portfolio since he entered government, Mr Boles has reopened the debate over how much more housing Britain needs and where.
It is not yet clear what the compromise will look like, although discussions are under way between planning minister Nick Boles and the rebel MPs.
One of the editors of the book, Nicholas Boles, argues that the virtue of people like himself is precisely that they are not professional politicians.
On Newsnight Mr Boles says that the failure to increase the rate of house building is, in his opinion, "the biggest social justice crisis we have".
He appealed to Housing Minister Nick Boles to use his authority to allow authorities like Kettering to say no to developers while neighbourhood plans were being worked up.
BBC: Kettering MP says planning loophole is spoiling village
Some councils have warned the scheme - for England - will be a "free-for-all", but Mr Boles said he did not "see it as a crime against humanity".
Mr Boles will appear on Newsnight on Monday to propose ways his party can best address the decline in living standards, faltering in the UK for the last decade.
Earlier this month, Nick Boles, a new Tory MP and kite-flying outrider for the modernising camp, called for the two parties to forge an electoral pact at the next election.
For the Conservatives it is easier to see the headline attraction of going further on welfare (although hard, Nick Boles' speech suggests how: deep into tax credits and benefits).
Principal Andrew Boles apologized and blamed the culinary company.
Mr Boles becomes the most senior of modernisers around the prime minister to endorse the scrapping of benefits for the elderly, as well as proposing a delay in bringing in social care.
Conservative MP Nick Boles is also urging a significant further scaling back of tax credits and housing benefit, and a re-examination of the "lazy sentimentalism" of the Sure Start programme of children's centres.
Another fun hearing will be the appearance of Planning Minister Nick Boles and Lord Taylor, chair of the External Review of Planning Practice Guidance before the Communities and Local Government Committee (at 4.30pm).
Mr Boles explains the incentive could see groups such as parish councils and residents groups up and down the country receive hundreds of thousands of pounds should they support proposals for more house building.
Speaking on the World at One, Planning Minister Nick Boles said Richmond councillors were entitled to their views but he expected the move to be approved by the "vast majority" of councils in England.
Mr Boles says the housing problem lies at the root of many other problems because if people are unable to get houses they cannot bring their children up well or move to an area with jobs.
Mr Boles's enthusiasm for promoting development has already made him one of the more controversial middle-ranking ministers, and he will doubtless be quizzed about his latest proposal, to allow former offices to be converted to residential use.
"It's my job to make the arguments to these people that if they carry on writing letters, their kids are never going to get a place with a garden to bring up their grandkids, " said Mr Boles.
Normally the Secretary of State, Eric Pickles, is the star turn, but this time we can expect some pointed questions to the new Planning Minister, Nick Boles, about possible moves to allow more development on green belt land.
Mr Boles caused controversy last month when in his first interview since becoming the minister for planning, he said that green field sites would have to be built on if Britain was going to meet the demand for housing.
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