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Starmer: Wrecked policing means rapists and burglars walk streets with impunity

The Labour leader said 96% of theft and burglary cases did not end up going before the courts.

Richard Wheeler
Wednesday 22 March 2023 09:34 EDT
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer attacked the Governmentā€™s record on crime (House of Commons/UK Parliament)
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer attacked the Governmentā€™s record on crime (House of Commons/UK Parliament) (PA Wire)

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Rapists and burglars are able to ā€œwalk the streets with impunityā€ after the Conservatives ā€œwreckedā€ policing, Sir Keir Starmer has said.

The Labour leader aimed the criticism at Rishi Sunak as he urged the Prime Minister to accept in full the findings of a damning review into the Metropolitan Police by Baroness Casey.

Mr Sunak responded by defending his Governmentā€™s efforts to increase rape prosecutions and to tackle crime rates while also labelling Labour ā€œsoft on crimeā€.

The exchanges occurred during a session of Prime Ministerā€™s Questions frequently disrupted by backbench heckling.

Sir Keir, in a reference to Mr Sunak receiving a Ā£50 fixed-penalty notice for being present at a birthday gathering for Boris Johnson during the pandemic, said: ā€œThe only criminal investigation heā€™s been involved in is the one that found him guilty of breaking the law.ā€

He added: ā€œIā€™ve prosecuted countless rapists and I support tougher sentences, but you have to catch the criminals first and when 98% of rapists are not even being put before the court, thatā€™s a massive failure of Government.ā€

Sir Keir, in his concluding remarks, said: ā€œThe reality is after 13 years of Tory Government theyā€™ve done nothing on standards, neighbourhood policing has been shattered and burglars and rapists walk the streets with impunity.ā€

Mr Sunak referred to partygate investigator Sue Gray, who quit the civil service for a senior Labour role, as he replied: ā€œI said at the time I respected the decision the police reached and I offered an unreserved apology.

Burglars are twice as likely to get away with it now than they were a decade ago. They should be ashamed of that record

Sir Keir Starmer, Labour leader

ā€œBut, for the avoidance of doubt, at the moment that happened there was a full investigation by a very senior civil servant.

ā€œThe findings of which confirmed that I had no advance knowledge about what had been planned having arrived early for a meeting.

ā€œBut he doesnā€™t need me to tell him that, heā€™s probably spoken to the reportā€™s author much more frequently than I have.ā€

Sir Keir initially focused on the Casey review which found that Britainā€™s biggest police force is institutionally racist, misogynist and homophobic.

The Labour leader earlier said: ā€œI accept those findings in full. Does the Prime Minister?ā€

Mr Sunak said: ā€œI was appalled to read the descriptions of the abhorrent cases of officers who have betrayed the publicā€™s trust and abused their powers. And let me be clear, it is and was unacceptable and should never have happened.

ā€œWe have taken a series of steps already and the Government will now work with the mayor and the Metropolitan commissioner to ensure that culture, standards and behaviour all improve.

ā€œAt the heart of this matter are the people whose lives have been ruined by what has happened ā€“ it is imperative that the Met works hard to regain the trust of the people it is privileged to serve.ā€

Sir Keir said: ā€œI take it from that answer that the Prime Minister does accept the Casey findings in full, including the institutional failures.ā€

He went on to urge Mr Sunak to back Labourā€™s plan for ā€œproper mandatory national vettingā€ which he argued would ā€œend the farceā€ of different recruitment standards across police forces.

Mr Sunak, in his reply, said: ā€œThere is no need to back that plan because we are already taking action to tackle the issues that are raised in the Casey report.ā€

Sir Keir went on to describe the Governmentā€™s attitude to policing as ā€œsheer negligenceā€ and warned that rape charges fell to 1.6% under the Governmentā€™s watch.

He responded to heckling by saying Tory MPs should be ā€œashamedā€ of their record and referred to reports of a woman in Armthorpe, South Yorkshire, being beaten with a baseball bat three years ago but with nobody charged.

He pressed Mr Sunak about the charge rate for theft and burglary, with the Prime Minister replying: ā€œActually, since 2019, neighbourhood crime is down by 25%.

ā€œBut he asked rightly about whatā€™s happening with rape cases, so let me just tell him that we are on track to meet our target of doubling the number of rape cases that are reaching our courts.ā€

Sir Keir, who represents Holborn and St Pancras in London, said: ā€œThe Prime Minister stands there and pretends that everything is fine. He is totally out-of-touch.

ā€œHe needs to get out of Westminster, get out of Kensington, and I donā€™t mean to Malibu, to the streets of Britain, go there and tell people itā€™s all fine and see what reaction he gets.

ā€œThe answer he didnā€™t want to give, although he knows it, is 4% of theft and burglaries are charged ā€“ 96% of theft and burglary cases not even going before the courts.

ā€œBurglars are twice as likely to get away with it now than they were a decade ago. They should be ashamed of that record.ā€

After highlighting burglaries in Armthorpe, Sir Keir said: ā€œRather than boasting and blaming others, why doesnā€™t he tell the country when heā€™s going to get the theft and burglary charge rate back to where it was before they wrecked policing?ā€

Mr Sunak, who represents Richmond in North Yorkshire, replied: ā€œNorth Yorkshire is a lot further away than north London.ā€

After Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle had to calm MPs, and suggested those too excited could head to the tearoom, Mr Sunak said: ā€œThey will be Yorkshire Teas, Mr Speaker.

ā€œSince the Conservatives came into power, crime is down 50%, violent crime down 40%, burglary down 56%. Why? Because weā€™ve recruited 20,000 more police officers, weā€™ve given them the powers to tackle crime and weā€™ve kept serious offenders in prison for longer.ā€

He criticised Labour for opposing Government measures, adding: ā€œItā€™s the same old Labour ā€“ soft on crime, soft on criminals.ā€

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