Amendment 36 Moved by Baroness Hayman of Ullock 36: After Clause
31, insert the following new Clause— “Mayors and Police and
Crime Commissioners future relationships(1) Within 30 days of
this act receiving Royal Assent, a Minister of the Crown must
publish a statement on plans for the future relationship between
Mayors and Police and Crime Commissioners (2) The
statement must include details on their distinct responsibilities
and...Request free trial
Amendment 36
Moved by
of Ullock
36: After Clause 31, insert the following new Clause—
“Mayors and Police and Crime
Commissioners future relationships(1) Within 30 days of
this act receiving Royal Assent, a Minister of the Crown must
publish a statement on plans for the future relationship between
Mayors and Police and Crime
Commissioners (2) The statement must include details on
their distinct responsibilities and whether there are any plans
to transfer functions between the two roles.”Member’s explanatory
statement
The amendment intends to ensure that the government provides
clarity over the future role of Mayors and PCCs.
of Ullock (Lab)
My Lords, my Amendment 36 is designed to provide clarity over the
future relationships, roles and responsibilities of elected
mayors and Police and Crime
Commissioners The number of elected regional mayors has
grown in recent years, and the Government clearly want to create
more. At the same time, it also appears that the Bill’s proposals
will allow these mayors to take over, rather than run alongside,
the role of PCCs. Is it the Government’s intention to gradually
phase out the elected PCCs?
This matters, of course, because policing has never been under
more scrutiny and public confidence in some forces is,
unfortunately, at rock bottom. Although PCCs do not have
operational control over local forces, being watchdogs rather
than police chiefs, the hiring and firing of chief constables is
among their powers. Some mayors would quite like those powers for
themselves, so may seek a mandate to take them when they are next
up for election. We know that the next PCC and mayoral elections
are due in 2024—next year—and that there are already strong
feelings in some areas as to who should have the job of holding
the police to account.
Current legislation allows for a CCA mayor to apply to become the
PCC, first, if the majority of their constituent councils agree
and, secondly, following any consultation. The Bill removes those
conditions, even the need to consult. Clearly, consultation
should be essential for a change as big as this.
In Committee, the Minister said that
“councils do not deliver any of the services required by the PCC.
That is the job of the local police. Therefore, there is no
crossover in that way”.—[Official Report, 13/3/23; col.
1143.]
There was concern about that statement at the time. As my noble
friend Lady Taylor and others said, this is simply not the case.
Councils look at anti-social behaviour; they look at domestic
abuse work with their police colleagues. They have issues related
to local area policing. Councils set priorities with local
policing teams and deliver services jointly to address these
priorities. District councils have a community safety plan, a
committee and a chair, with constant interaction between the
PCC’s office and the councils, including the county council.
To say that there is no crossover between councils and PCCs is,
we believe, a false argument to justify what is planned as a
simple takeover of functions. I say this to make it clear that we
support the amendments in this group in the name of my noble
friend , Amendments 54 and 307A, which I
understand are to be spoken to by my noble friend . I also assure my
noble friend Lord Hunt that if he wishes to push his Amendment
53A to a vote, he will have our support.
(Lab)
My Lords, I thank my noble friend Lady Hayman. My noble friend
is addressing a memorial meeting
in Leicestershire for the late chief constable with whom he
worked very closely as police and crime commissioner.
To bring it back to my local patch, my concern is that Clause 59
means that the Conservative Mayor of the West Midlands Combined
Authority can become the police and crime commissioner for the
West Midlands Police whenever he wants, without consultation or
an open debate about the consequences for the West Midlands. That
is a local example of what my noble friend Lady Hayman has just
described. I recognise that a mayor can become a police and crime
commissioner if he or she has general support, as I think has
happened in Manchester and West Yorkshire, but in the West
Midlands that support has not been forthcoming. The local
authorities did not agree to it.
We have got used to voting for a police and crime commissioner.
As it happens, it has been for a Labour one each time—most
recently in May 2021, on the very same day that we voted for a
Conservative mayor. There is no suggestion that the two
postholders cannot work well together. Both were elected. I do
not understand what the argument for change is. What is the
argument for essentially nullifying the result of an election if
it does not seem to suit one party?
This is compounded by Amendment 307, which allows the West
Midlands mayor to take on PCC powers on Royal Assent—this could
happen in September. What is the rush? If the Government are
determined to go ahead with this clause, surely it should be done
in a seemly and orderly fashion?
(LD)
My Lords, this amendment is really important for democratic
overview of policing in a combined authority area. As the noble
Lord, , has said, West
Yorkshire already has a mayor and a non-elected police and crime
commissioner, because the arrangement for West Yorkshire—sadly,
in my view—was that the two roles would be combined. The elected
Mayor of West Yorkshire is therefore also responsible as police
and crime commissioner. The consequence of combining those two
roles has been that the Mayor of West Yorkshire was able to
appoint a police and crime commissioner for West Yorkshire.
The whole concept of Police and Crime
Commissioners was that there would be democratic
accountability for the oversight of policing in a police service
area. In West Yorkshire and other places, I think including
Manchester, that democratic accountability has disappeared
because the mayors in those places—I live in West Yorkshire so I
know the situation well—have appointed people they know as police
and crime commissioner.
That is no reflection on or criticism of the job that that
individual does, but it is a criticism of the lack of democratic
accountability. If the oversight of police and crime in a very
large area—2.5 million people—is given to an appointed person and
the electorate cannot vote them out of office, there is something
fundamentally wrong with the system. That is why Amendment 54 in
the name of the noble Lord, , and introduced by the noble
Lord, Lord Hunt, is so important. The Government have gone in the
wrong direction on this one. If we are to have Police and Crime
Commissioners they need to be elected, as they are
everywhere else in the country.
1.15pm
In introducing her amendment, the noble Baroness, Lady Hayman,
described how local authorities have direct involvement in
significant parts of policing in an area, in particular in
domestic violence but also in all sorts of neighbourhood policing
issues. An alcohol and drugs unit in a council can work closely
with the addiction section of a police force. There are lots of
issues on which the democratically accountable council has to
work together, we hope, with a directly accountable and elected
police commissioner. That accountability is being removed, so we
support the noble Lord, Lord Hunt.
It is quite wrong to combine the two roles. We need to hold on as
much as we can in this country to democratic accountability,
because it is seeping away; the creation of bigger councils,
meaning that they represent many more people than they used to,
is removing elected representatives from the people they
represent. That is not right and we must say so at every
opportunity. I hope the Government will move away from that,
because it is not right.
On the last point made by the noble Baroness, Lady Hayman, on
Amendment 53A, we think the case has been made and will support
it if she pushes it to a vote.
(Con)
My Lords, I thank the noble Baroness, Lady Hayman of Ullock, for
outlining her rationale for tabling Amendment 36: to clarify the
relationship between PCCs and mayors, and their respective roles
and responsibilities. She asked if the Government want to phase
out PCCs. There is no intention to do so. The intention is to
allow mayors only in some areas to exercise PCC functions. Some
areas will never have mayors who do so because only in
coterminous areas can mayors take those functions.
The levelling up White Paper set out the Government’s aspirations
for—
(LD)
The noble Baroness said that you could have a combined police and
crime commissioner and mayor only where there is coterminosity.
If combined authorities are now able to expand, will that undo
that requirement?
(Con)
No. I hate to bring up the West Midlands—I know the noble Lord
opposite will be very pleased that I am—but the Mayor of the West
Midlands has a choice: he can either agree to pursue the
expansion to include Warwickshire, which has its own PCC, so he
could no longer take the PCC role, or he can take the PCC role
and therefore not Warwickshire. That is the reality of what we
are doing. I hope I have explained that.
(Lab)
I think that is right, because you cannot be PCC over two police
forces; I fully understand that. What I would say is that if I
were in Warwickshire, I would think, “At some point, they will
merge West Midlands Police with Warwickshire”. That is just an
option for the future, but the Minister is absolutely right about
the fact that the mayor cannot oversee two forces.
(Con)
I hope I have clarified that point. What happens in the future
happens in the future; we are talking about this Bill, and the
Bill does not change that at all. As I said, the levelling up
White Paper set out the Government’s aspiration for, where
policing and combined authority boundaries align, combined
authority mayors to take the lead on public safety and take on
the role of the PCC—and to take steps to remove the barriers to
more CA mayors taking on PCC functions.
In an area where a devolution deal is agreed and the policing and
CA boundaries are not coterminous, the Government wish to
encourage close co-operation between the combined authority mayor
and the PCC. While it is important for the area to shape exactly
what strong partnership looks like in practice, one way of
achieving this would be to use the non-constituent or associate
membership model being established via provisions in the Bill.
This could allow the PCC a seat at the table and allow the
combined authority to confer voting rights on the PCC on matters
relevant to public safety. The information and clarifications
sought by this amendment are, we believe, already available, and
we do not agree that there is any need for a further
statement.
I turn to Amendment 54. Clause 59 amends the existing provisions
concerning the local consent requirements for the combined
authority mayors to take on the functions of a PCC. This reflects
that this transfer is merely a process whereby functions are
transferred from one directly elected person to another, without
any implications for the local authorities in the area. Clause 59
maintains the triple-lock model for conferring functions. That
triple lock is that any transfer or conferral of powers needs
local consent, the agreement of the Secretary of State and
approval by Parliament.
The change which Clause 59 makes is that in future, local consent
will be given simply by the mayor, who is democratically
accountable across the whole area. The transfer of PCC functions
to a mayor in no way diminishes the role of local government in
community safety. The local authority’s role in community safety
partnerships remains the same and the police and crime panel will
still exist, being responsible for scrutinising the mayor as the
PCC in the same way it scrutinised the PCC.
A mayor having PCC functions will, we believe, be able more
successfully to pursue their other ambitions and secure better
overall outcomes for their community. A deputy mayor for policing
and crime is appointed who can take on certain day-to-day
responsibilities for this role, ensuring that the mayor can
continue to focus on all their other priorities. The Government
are clear that we expect mayors to discuss any proposal seeking a
transfer of a PCC function with their combined authority in
advance of submitting a request for such a transfer to
government. This is in line with the existing expectation that
mayors seek the views of the relevant PCC, whose consent is not
required in legislation.
There is evidence of the considerable benefits that a mayor
having PCC functions brings. For example, in Greater Manchester,
following Greater Manchester Police’s escalation to “Engage” by
His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue
Services, and the resignation of its former chief constable, the
mayor appointed a new chief constable to develop and lead the
force’s transformation programme, the result of which has been to
ensure that the force focuses on getting the basics right and
improving outcomes for the region. Under the leadership of the
chief constable and with oversight and support from the mayor,
Greater Manchester Police is now responding faster to emergency
calls, and the number of open investigations has halved since
2021, and the inspectorate released the force from “Engage” in
October 2022 on the strength of the confidence in its improvement
trajectory. The Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy , was clear that he, as the PCC for
Greater Manchester, was accountable if things did not improve and
that he should be held to account at the ballot box.
And finally, my Lords—although I think that says it
all—government Amendment 307 provides for early commencement of
Clause 59, which would allow for the statutory requirements that
enable a transfer of PCC functions to CA mayors to be undertaken
from the date of Royal Assent. This will enable the timely
implementation of secondary legislation required for PCC function
transfers to mayors to take place in time for the May 2024
elections.
The Government’s intention is to align as far as possible with
the Gould principle relating to electoral management, which would
suggest that any statutory instruments transferring PCC functions
to mayors for May 2024 should be laid six months ahead of the
elections in early November to provide notice to candidates, the
electorate and the electoral administrations of any changes. It
is for these reasons that the Government are unable to accept
Amendment 307A proposed by the noble Lord, . It would time out any PCC
transfers in time for mayoral combined authority elections in
2024 where there is a local desire for this.
I hope that noble Lords will feel able to accept the early
commencement amendment for Clause 59 and that, following these
explanations, the noble Baroness will feel able to withdraw her
amendment.
of Ullock (Lab)
My Lords, I thank the Minister for her response. I beg leave to
withdraw my amendment.
Amendment 36 withdrawn.
For context, OPEN HERE
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