Daniel Sandford and Thomas MackintoshUK correspondent
EPAThe home secretary has announced a blueprint for reforming what she called the “broken” policing model in England and Wales.
Shabana Mahmood confirmed the shake-up will create a new National Police Service (NPS) to fight the most complex cross-border crime and could also see the number of local forces in England and Wales cut by around two-thirds.
She told the House of Commons she also intends to make better use of technology – including the “largest-ever rollout of facial recognition”.
“This government’s reforms will ensure we have the right policing in the right place,” Mahmood said.
The home secretary told Parliament the 106-page white paper, published on Monday, represented “the most significant changes to policing in this country in nearly 200 years”.
Mahmood emphasised that the new system would work by having local policing “that protects our communities” and national policing “that protects us all”.
The Home Office said the precise number and nature of each force will be the subject to a review that will report back to Mahmood in the summer.
Labour’s Avon and Somerset Police and Crime Commissioner welcomed the review – but urged caution.
Clare Moody told the : “There does need to be careful analysis of what this will deliver. Not just for numbers, but how this will this support our neighbourhoods.”
In response, Conservative shadow home secretary Chris Philp said the government’s statement “was striking for what it did not say”, pointing at falling national police numbers since Labour came to power.
He also told the Commons the Tories would oppose the plans to merge forces.
Philp said: “Her plan includes mandating the merger of police forces, and briefings over the weekend suggest a reduction from 43 down to 10 or 12”.
“Such huge forces will be remote from the communities they serve,” he said.
“Resources will be drawn away from villages and towns towards large cities.”
Home Office sources insist that reducing the number of forces will not make policing less local.
Mahmood previously unveiled plans in November to get rid of elected Police and Crime Commissioners, and recently spoke of plans to create a “British FBI” which she said will free up forces to tackle everyday crime.
The home secretary also confirmed on Monday that she wants to create a licence to practice for police officers similar to the one for doctors, and to give herself the power to remove a chief constable for poor performance.
The proposed new NPS – which Mahmood has previously referred to a the British FBI – will bring together the existing National Crime Agency (NCA) and Counter Terrorism Policing.
It will also include some functions currently carried out by the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC), the National Police Air Service (NPAS), and the College of Policing and will be responsible for delivering a national forensics service.
Currently most funding, except that for counter-terrorism which is ring-fenced, goes to local forces then has to be negotiated back for national projects, which NPCC chairman Gavin Stephen said is “too slow, too cumbersome and doesn’t work”.
“The consolidation of the money and the decision making is really important,” Stephen said after Mahmood’s announcement.
“You’ve got rapidly changing new technologies which show huge promise, then you can’t get them rolled out because there are too many decision makers in the system.”
Mahmood told Parliament the NPS will be run by a National Police Commissioner accountable to the home secretary.
Officials say that they hope to have the NPS fully operational some time in the next parliament.
Supporting the proposed new NPS and its wide remit, Graeme Biggar, the director general of the National Crime Agency said: “The threat is changing, it is becoming more complex and more interconnected.
“Terrorism, hostile state threats, and organised crime gangs increasingly overlap.”
The plan to reduce the number of forces is driven by a desire to reduce duplication, and to reduce the huge disparities in performance between forces.
Scotland merged its eight forces in April 2013 to create Police Scotland. The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) was established in November 2001. It replaced the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) as part of the Good Friday Agreement reforms.
A Home Office source told the : “The charge rate for home burglary is 2.8% Hertfordshire and 13% in South Wales. Where you live determines the service you get from your force.”
Mahmood’s new proposals are titled “From Local to National: A New Model for Policing” and the ambition is to provide a police service council ward by council ward.”
The white paper says: “A system designed in the 1960s, based around 43 local police forces, is no longer fit for purpose.”
In order to help local police officers the government is promising to cut “excessive” bureaucracy so that officers are no long “fighting crime with one hand tied behind their backs”.
Getty ImagesOfficials hope to pass the legislation to make police mergers more straightforward in this parliament and to get through at least one “pathfinder” merger before the next election.
But they concede the majority of mergers would happen in the next parliament.
Elsewhere, the Home Office is funding 40 more Live Facial Recognition vans after the technology proved successful in South Wales and London.
An existing 10 Live Facial Recognition vans will rise to 50 and will be rolled out nationwide, to catch criminals on police watchlists, the Home Office said.
There are also plans to set up a new National Centre for AI in policing. The idea is to develop new AI tools for police officers to help with things like going through CCTV footage and transcribing and redacting documents.


