Labour set to axe police forces in huge shake-up amid fears over crime | Politics | News

Shabana Mahmood is set to radically overhaul policing in the UK (Image: Getty)
The number of police forces will be โsignificantlyโ reduced as part of radical plans to be announced by Shabana Mahmood. The Home Secretary will on Monday overhaul neighbourhood policing to tackle an โepidemic of everyday offencesโ, such as shoplifting. And Ms Mahmood will do this by axing a number of forces, with existing ones effectively pushed together to pool resources. Local Policing Areas will be established within larger forces to tackle neighbourhood crimes.
The Home Office will defend this by insisting the โsavings made by fewer administrators and managers, as well as shared back-office functions and procurement, will be ploughed into frontline officers, neighbourhood police, 999 response and criminal investigations.โ
A Government source said: โThat is more money catching criminals and cutting crime in local communities.
ย โIn a white paper titled โFrom local to national: a new model for policingโ, Mahmood is expected to outline a radical blueprint for reform, so local forces protect their community.
โUnderpinning the reforms are simple aims to catch criminals, cut crime, and protect the public.
โAs part of these reforms, the Government will radically change the structure of policing.
โFirst, it will pledge to significantly reduce the number of police forces by the end of the next Parliament.
โThese forces will specialise in tackling serious and organised crime and complex investigations such as homicides, drugs and county lines.ย
โUnder this new structure, all forces – regardless of where they are – will have the tools and resources they need to fight serious crime. Where you live will no longer determine the outcomes you get from your force.โย
Ms Mahmood is expected to say new, larger forces should focus on tackling serious and organised crime, as well as complex cases like murder and drugs.
Ministers will also announce plans for new Local Policing Areas, with local officers focusing on neighbourhood policing.
It is proposed these will be set up in every borough, town or city across in England, and will be tasked with working with communities and fighting what the government calls “local crime”, such as shoplifting, phone theft and drug dealing.
A source added: โPeople are experiencing crimes that seem to have no consequence.
โThere is an epidemic of everyday offences โ like shoplifting, drug dealing, phone theft, and anti-social behaviour – that affect us all but go unpunished.
โToo often, people report these crimes and then wait days for a response. By the time the officers arrive, if they do, the perpetrators and witnesses are long gone.
โAs a result, criminals feel they can cause havoc on our streets with impunity. Shop theft has risen by 72% since 2010. Street theft up 58%.โ
And ministers will say they have been forced to act because of huge disparities in the number of crimes being solved in different areas and a lack of specialist capabilities.
A source said: โSome forces are delivering exceptional performance, but not all are.
โThe outcomes for crime investigations differ markedly depending on where you live.
โThe charge rate for firearm offences ranged from a low of nearly 4% in Durham to a high of 22% in Hertfordshire.
โFor home burglaries, just 2.8% in Hertfordshire to 13% in South Wales. And smaller police forces are unable to respond to major incidents or events, without severely diverting resources away from local policing.
โWiltshire Police were forced to rely on 40 other police forces in response to the Salisbury Poisonings and Essex Police were overwhelmed when they launched 39 simultaneous investigations into the deaths of Vietnamese nationals found in a lorry.”
