
Despite
the opposition of most of the police forces involved, their police authorities,
the public-at-large (where they have been consulted), all the opposition parties
and many back-bench MPs on the government side; despite there being no merit to
the plan and good evidence that it will have an adverse effect on policing
standards; despite the costs; despite the government neither having asked for
nor obtained an electoral mandate for so doing; and despite Tony Blair himself
saying that they would not be forced on police forces, the home secretary
Charles Clarke has today announced that the government is to forge ahead with
police force mergers
According to the report on The Guardian website and elsewhere, new "superforces"
will be created in East Anglia, the Midlands, the south east and Yorkshire and
Humber.
Since none of the forces have agreed to the merger, the home secretary must now
undertake a period of "consultation", which ends on 11 August. Needless to say,
the results are a foregone conclusion as Clarke has said he expects to begin
merger procedures in the autumn with the new forces coming into operation on
1
April 2008.
This is one of the most egregious examples of a doctrinaire government flying in
the face of public and professional opinion, for absolutely no good reason. The
issues have been explored fully in a report written by Owen Paterson MP, with a
little help from his friends, and I commend you to it (32 pages - .pdf format).
Because the mergers bring the police forces closer to the regional structures
favoured by this government – alongside the ambulance and fire services – this
is being seen by some as part of a hidden EU agenda. However, while
regionalisation, as such, is in accordance with EU ambitions, there is no good
evidence that this current move is being dictated in any way by the EU – nor
indeed are the police structures that will result to be found in any other EU
member state.
What is certainly the case, though, is that this government is an intellectual
companion of the EU in its denial of democracy and its authoritarian behaviour,
illustrating once again that, when it comes to dealing with the governance of
this country, the EU is only one part of the problem.
The more immediate problem, however, is that many police forces are already too
large and detached from their community roots, with no real accountability.
These "mergers" are going to make a bad situation inestimably worse, with
results that are only too predictable. Today, is a very, very bad day for
democracy.
Richard North
EU Referendum