Until last month, policing priorities and the liaison
between elected representatives and police forces were the remit of Police
Authorities. These have now given way to Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs),
the reason being that this makes policing more democratically accountable, as
the Commissioners are elected representatives themselves. And in the vanguard
pressing for them was an old friend of this blog.
More guff from Tufton Street
Yes, supporting PCCs from the very start has been the
dubiously talented array of non-job holders at the so-called Taxpayers’
Alliance (TPA): back in 2010, using
the platform afforded him by ConservativeHome
(not that they’re Conservatives, of course), non-job holder Mark Wallace told
that “we need directly elected Police
Commissioners”. He urged the Home Secretary to press on with them.
Indeed, it was later
reported, also on ConservativeHome,
that the TPA’s EU “expert” Lee
Rotherham would stand for election as a PCC in Lincolnshire, and he was
described as “An excellent candidate”. Sadly, when the
election was held, Rotherham was elsewhere. So that excellence did not
extend to actually completing and submitting nomination papers, then.
But the TPA pressed on with its support, with “grassroots coordinator” Andrew Allison
(as the TPA has no grassroots, this is their most aptly titled non-job) complaining
about supposed waste by Humberside Police Authority while repeating the
mantra “We support elected Police
Commissioners”. This was followed with more TPA “research” titled High
Costs Of Unaccountable Police Authorities Revealed.
Not everyone, however, was persuaded: West Midlands
Councillor John O’Shea, aka PoliticalHackUK,
asserted
that the TPA had it wrong, especially the claim that PCCs would replace
chief executives. He estimated that, when the cost of elections was factored
in, PCCs would in fact cost more than the Police Authorities they were
replacing. So how are things looking as the dust settles after those elections?
Well, quite apart from the
miserable 14.7% turnout across the country, the TPA are complaining about
the activities of the very people they campaigned for. “Are
Police and Crime Commissioners appointing friends to non-jobs?” asked
non-job holder Andrew Allison, wording his rhetorical question in the style of
Fox News Channel (fair and balanced my
arse). Then he answered his own question.
“More
rows as some PCCs appoint friends as deputies” he confirmed. What did
he expect? Freed from the oversight of Police Authorities who would have
stamped on that kind of behaviour in short order, PCCs can please themselves
until the next election comes into view. The TPA has once again failed to think
through its ideas and is now playing the other side of the field, hoping the
public won’t notice.
Well, they have noticed, and
hopefully some of the politicians will notice, too.
1 comment:
The public are strongly againt the role of Police and Crime Commissioner, even the few who voted.
A grassroots movement to aboliosh the PCCs before the scandals grow any more has a petition at:
http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/41806
(There should be no gaps in the address!
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