Weather Tonight: 9°c Partly Cloudy Night Morning: 13°c Overcast

News

Home Secretary Theresa May has hit back at senior police chiefs over political criticism of their initial riot response
Home Secretary Theresa May has hit back at senior police chiefs over political criticism of their initial riot response

May hits back in riot policing row

15 Aug 2011


Home Secretary Theresa May has hit back at senior police chiefs over political criticism of their initial riot response, insisting it was her job to tell forces "what the public want them to do".

Mrs May refused to accept complaints that politicians were overstepping the line after the head of Scotland Yard attacked "extremely hurtful and untrue" claims that police had been timid.

She defended the Government's determination to press ahead with police budget cuts, saying they could be made "without affecting their ability to do the job the public want them to do".

And she defended the decision to recruit US "Supercop" William Bratton as an adviser on tackling gang culture in the UK.

Friction between the police and the Government mounted today with the president of the Association of Chief Police Officers, Sir Hugh Orde, dismissing Mr Bratton's relevance.

And Metropolitan Police Acting Commissioner Tim Godwin complained of "inconsistencies" from Parliament over tactics and spoke of his upset at political criticism of the Met's response.

Mrs May said individual officers had done an "amazing job" in policing the streets during the rioting and looting and said the country owed them an "enormous debt of gratitude".

But she told Sky News Murnaghan programme: "The police and the politicians have different jobs to do here. The police have their operational independence, that's absolutely right.

"It is right that no politician should tell a police officer who to arrest or who to investigate.

"But the minister's job is both to ensure that the police know they have support when they get tough and also, it is my job as Home Secretary, to ensure that the police know what the public want them to do."

 

  • Brave Marie Colvin killed in Syria siege Colvin One of Britain's leading war reporters was killed in Syria today when 10 rockets slammed into a makeshift press centre. Marie Colvin of the...
  • Cameron: Help Somalia and head off terror threat to UK Cameron Somalia David Cameron today warned that extremists in Somalia could "poison" the minds of young Britons unless the world acts to repair the war-torn...
  • Cameron and Boris: Rethink plan to close The Mall for three months St James Map Exclusive: The Mall is due to shut for more than three months for the Queen's Jubilee and the Olympics, prompting fears of a summer...
  • 'End London's Punch and Judy politics' Gus O'Donnel The former head of the Civil Service said today that more candidates should run for London Mayor to get away from the "Punch and Judy...
  • Why a London Somali chose to run the most volatile capital in Africa Somalia As the world's statesmen gather in London to discuss whether to take military action in Somalia, the man plucked from Camden to be mayor of...
  • Who pulled the plug on Adele? Suzi Aplin James Corden has blamed producers for the decision to cut Adele's Brits acceptance speech short because of an overrunning TV schedule
  • St Paul's campers urged to leave peacefully as they lose eviction appeal St Paul's The St Paul's protest campers face immediate eviction today after losing a final court battle. Three Court of Appeal judges threw out their...
  • Emergency crews stage Tube terror attack drill Tube terror drill Emergency crews responded to a mocked-up terror attack on the Tube during a security test for the Olympics
  • Mayor poll 'may end up in court over vote fraud' Ken Boris split The battle between Boris Johnson and Ken Livingstone for the London mayoralty could end in the courts because of electoral fraud fears,...
  • 35 years for rape and murder of mother-to-be Nikitta Former nightclub bouncer Carl Whant was jailed for at least 35 years today for the rape and murder of pregnant teenager Nikitta Grender
  •  

    Don't Miss