Labor wants to reduce the number of official authorities that receive participation in planning decisions in a drive to unlock more development.
The government will discuss the removal of Sport England, the Trust theaters and the Garden History Society from the list of 'legal consulti's', while the scope of others who can give input will be reduced.
Angela Rayner said that reforms are needed to ensure that the system is 'sensible and balanced', while the government improves plans to build 1.5 million houses this parliament.
However, one of the bodies removed from the list has rejected the idea that they are an obstacle to growth.
Reforms set out today will also explain that councils should only go to legal consultis if this is necessary to do this, and decisions should not be postponed after the standard 21-day deadline.
The scope of other legal consulti's will be limited to concentrate on heritage, safety and environmental protection.
Housing secretary Mrs. Rayner said: 'We have set growth in the heart of our plans as a government, with our plan for a Mijlpaal change to secure 1.5 million houses and to unleash the potential of Great Britain.

Angela Rayner (depicted with Keir Starmer on a construction site in Cambridgeshire in December) said that reforms are needed for the planning system
'We must reform the system to ensure that it is wise and balanced and does not create unintended delays – holding people's lives and harming our efforts to build the houses that people desperately need.
“New developments must still meet our high expectations to create the houses, facilities and infrastructure that communities need.”
Home builders and planning authorities have said that legal consultis can take too long to give their advice and to submit objections that will be withdrawn later.
In the past three years, more than 300 applications have been brought to the State Secretary after disagreements of Consultières, said the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government.
The Trust theaters said that it is' confident ', it is proactive with all local planning authorities and developers and gives us advice in a timely and efficient way'.
In a statement, Chief Executive Officer Joshua McTaggart and chairman Dave Moutrey said they 'welcomed the announcement of an evaluation', but the government called on a 'supervision of a data -led and rigorous process that will ensure that each of the individual 25 statutory consultants'.
They reject the idea that they are an infringement of growth, said: 'Although housing is a necessary part of the growth of the country, we know that this government also understands that communities should have access to culture, stories and educational opportunities.

Kevin Hollinrake, secretary of shadow housing, said that the proposal causes more delay
“Theaters are an important provider of this and theaters are what we are trying to protect.”
Kevin Hollinrake, secretary of shadow homes, said: 'We welcome the continuation of the work we did in the government to speed up the planning system, but this is even more delay and another assessment.
'These proposed changes will make nothing to help ordinary British on the home ladder, because the government has deleted the discounts of the stamp rights and helps to buy around a million first buyers to buy a house.
“Neither will they take the action needed to control our boundaries and reduce immigration.
“This week, the government must support conservative proposals for the Borders Act to dramatically reduce immigration and to ensure that new houses go to British families and not illegal immigrants.”