More on the Federation

My last article on the Police Federation prompted a number of comments, two of which were to the effect that I’d got it wrong, and that membership of the Police Federation was not compulsory.

Now, as it happens, it is clear that the Federation is the only statutory staff association for federated ranks, and therefore my points still hold – if it gets too political, or the wrong kind of political, officers are not free to take themselves elsewhere.

However, whether membership is automatic, and whether subscriptions have to be paid are actually very important points. What I stated was my impression from when I joined the service and a Fed Rep addressed our intake on day 1 or 2 of the course, when we were still inclined to believe whatever it was he said.

But what is the truth? – I am having difficulty locating the Police Act 1919 online at the moment, which is where I think this will be resolved, so perhaps readers will be able to help. For now, we know the following:-

The Federation describe themselves as “a staff association for all police constables, sergeants and inspectors (including chief inspectors” here.

However, the Chairman, in a fit of modesty here, only claims to represent 99% of serving officers, though the 1% could be a reference to the Superintendent’s Association and ACPO. He specifically says that membership is not compulsory and then sells the benefits of membership.

However, this text on employment law suggests that police officers are automatically members of the Police Federation.

Reluctant as I am to turn to Wikipedia as a source, I note the current text on the federation begins with “The Police Federation of England and Wales is the representative body to which all police officers in England and Wales up to and including the rank of Chief Inspector belong. There are 141,000 members as of July 2009. Members can elect not to pay subscriptions and thereby not receive the legal representation and other benefits that paying members receive, but they still continue officially to be members of the federation. In reality only a very few officers have ever decided not to pay their full subscription dues.”

So, whoever was wrong, at least they have company.

However, there are not only the questions of whether membership, and indeed subscriptions, are compulsory. There is also the question of what impression people have been given when they joined. Certainly my impression was that there was no choice.

If this is the impression left, about membership and subscriptions, and it turns out not to be the case, then we could have a mis-selling scandal, and there could be plenty of cops who have paid 30 years of subs on the basis of a misrepresentation. Anyone fancy claiming them back?

Furthermore, any PCC will want to know on what basis the Federation reps he talks to claim to represent the rank and file. Is it because everyone is automatically a member, or because the vast majority of officers choose to be a member, or because the officers join to get insurance, or because they think they have to join, or have to be insured when in fact they don’t?

I’m therefore very interested to see if anyone can resolve this, or tell us what impression they were given when they joined the police service.

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Federation Politics

I was once a member of the Police Federation. This was not by choice, other than that I had chosen to be a police officer, and I couldn’t do that without being in the Federation. I don’t remember feeling any huge benefit from being in the Federation, and remember colleagues who thought it was only really there to help officers seeking sickness pensions, and that this role has largely gone in the time since then. I contributed to an insurance scheme they arranged in case any of us were sued, and I now know there were lots of things they did of which I was unaware at the time, but I neither engaged with it, nor was motivated to protest being forced to be part of it.

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What on earth are Lancashire Labour up to?

As regular readers will be aware, I am a Conservative in Lancashire, rumoured in the press to be interested in standing for the Lancashire Police and Crime Commissioner post. I try to be straight with people, and welcome the contribution of all candidates to this site, including Independents and members of the Labour party. This is not a campaign site, but what should I do when information comes my way that is of relevance to what is happening with Labour in Lancashire? Well, if it was anywhere else and was any other party, I would probably check it and report it if it was of decent quality and likely to interest my readers. So, even though I may have an interest, here goes:-

You may remember the first Labour candidate in Lancashire out in public was Chris Maughan, the young Blackpool Councillor with a knack for campaigning on YouTube (the videos now seem to have gone). The party decided not to longlist him, so despite being good enough for the party to put on Lancashire Police Authority, he didn’t even get an interview to be Labour’s candidate for the Police Authority’s replacement. Funny that.

The Independent Lancashire Police Authority member Ibrahim Master’s candidacy was announced online, not by him, but by Operation Black Vote (and now confirmed with a website containing an endorsement from Jack Straw). If you don’t know Mr Master, I do. He has a long history in local political and community matters, particularly in Blackburn, and once headed up Lancashire Council of Mosques. When Blackburn Muslims talk of ‘our Lord and Master’, they are referring to Lord (Adam) Desai and ‘Ibby’ Master. I have known Ibby for a long time, get on well with him (I think!) and worked with him on projects in the past, but it remains to be seen whether his appeal within Labour can be extended beyond the community politics of East Lancashire.

The shortlisting produced a surprise third candidate, Lancashire-lad and former PR-man for the Local Government Association Mark Atkinson, now working for a London-based autism charity. The response within Lancashire Labour brought back memories of when Jacqui Smith was appointed Home Secretary, and many people spent a few weeks calling her Jacqui Who. “Mark Who?”, they said, and consequently it took TopOfTheCops an uncharacteristically long couple of weeks to find out more about him. Seems nice enough, by the way.

Then two new mysteries…

The fourth candidate was long known to be County Councillor Clive Grunshaw, but he didn’t go public till outed by Michael Crick, and comments to the Lancashire Evening Post soon followed. Clive has been on Lancashire Police Authority for a long-time, surely long enough to know that he is not the Chair of the Police Authority. The current Chair, Blackburn Councillor Malcolm Doherty, retires in May, but he hasn’t gone yet, and there hasn’t been a vote for his replacement, so why for the last 3 months at least has County Councillor Grunshaw’s county council website (since amended) claimed that he is “chair to Lancashire Police Authority”, which is demonstrably untrue? If Lancashire Police Authority now vote him in as chair, it looks like all those ‘Independent’ members have been taken for granted as his supporters. With 7 of 8 having already backed his proposal to refuse £2 million from the government, preferring instead to hike Council Tax by £1.7 million, thereby leaving the Constabulary £300,000 out of pocket, you can perhaps understand his confidence.

Clive Grunshaw’s County Council mini-site above, with a magnified excerpt from paragraph 5 below.

And then, it turns out that there has been a secret fifth candidate all along. Chris Cheetham, former County Councillor of 28 years experience, including a time in charge of the County Council’s finances, reportedly applied for the nomination, waited to hear about the next stage while other candidates were interviewed, and then found out that he had been longlisted, but they had quite simply forgotten to interview him. So imagine finding yourself on the panel that has to deal with that mess- what do they do with Lancashire’s former cabinet member for Adult and Community Services having already decided the shortlist? Interview him late and then turn him down! No need to amend the shortlist.

A conspiracy-theorist would love this. With the plum Greater Manchester nomination falling into Tony Lloyd’s hands unopposed by the time the shortlist was decided, are Lancashire Labour members being offered Hobson’s choice:- Clive Grunshaw, or someone else whose backing may be confined to East Lancashire, or a London-based PR man most of them have never heard of, but with the experienced competitor and the young innovator being swept aside?

Not for the first time in this campaign we ask “Cock-up or conspiracy”. I’m still tempted toward the former, but neither are inspiring.

TopOfTheCops approached North West Labour for confirmation of the part of the above report about Chris Cheetham’s application being forgotten, but they would not confirm or deny any details, instead releasing the following statement…

“The Party wanted to hear from a diverse range of people, from all walks of life, who were interested in becoming a Police and Crime Commissioner in their area. We laid down rigorous criteria to find the best candidates possible who share our values and understand the challenge ahead.

“The NEC long listing panel made their decisions in accordance with this selection procedure. We had a great response and unfortunately not every candidate can be successful. We won’t be publishing the names of applicants at this stage of the process.”

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Say “No Way” to the L.G.A.?

The Association of Police Authorities has been commissioned by the Home Office to provide an interim successor organisation between the election of Police and Crime Commissioners in November and the end of their financial year next March.

This could provide some competition for the Local Government Association, who are already promoting a “Police and Crime Commissioners Association” but, as the A.P.A. have been commissioned by the Home Office, only the A.P.A. version will have places on the various national boards that need filling.

Of course, the A.P.A. don’t work out much better than the L.G.A. in terms of how historically supportive they haven’t been of the idea of Police and Crime Commissioners, and they are in discussion with the L.G.A. about possible joint working, so it might not be a competitive environment after all, unless the A.P.A. can resist the seduction.

I’m told there will be a proper launch once they’ve sorted out the details and thought of a name, so why not head over to the A.P.A. website, give them your idea for a name for an Association of Police And Crime Commissioners – oh, there’s one, APaCCs, catchy and not a massive change to their logo… and tell them what a bad idea it would be to fall under the L.G.A.’s spell.

Of course, there is always the secret third option of the PCCs setting up something themselves.

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Long Weekend Update Part 3- Monday 9 April 2012

Candidates

Dorset Independent Candidate Martyn Underhill launched his campaign website and Facebook page, with the theme ‘Keep Politics Out Of Policing’ – this seems to be a common theme with Independents, though I’m sure they mean “party politics”, as the whole running for election, getting your messages to voters, and hoping to get a majority of votes on the day is, well, politics. The problem with saying ‘party politics’ though is that many party candidates might agree. As PCCs are single elected individuals not dependent on a group of other elected individuals in the same party for support, and actually needing to work across the political kaleidoscope of local government, they are as weak a version of party politics as this country gets. At the moment.

In the Bedfordshire Conservative race, there has been a bit of a change around. Richard Stay has dropped out, while former Councillor Jas Parmar and former vice-chairman of Bedfordshire County Council Lynne Faulkner have dropped in. Bernard Rix is still running, in the London Marathon, for Crimestoppers. Depending on which costume he chooses, he might still be running for some time.

Jacqui Rayment has confirmed she is in a shortlist of 2 for the Labour nomination in Hampshire.

Jon Collins pointed out that local MPs Maria Eagle, Joe Benton, Dave Watts and Steve Rotheram have all backed Peter Kilfoyle for Merseyside PCC, but it seems almost unfair to mention it when if we listed all the people endorsing his Labour rival Jane Kennedy for the same role this article would be twice as long.

ConservativeHome have drawn attention to Paul Dendle’s campaign in Sussex, while he has been busy populating his website with articles such as Will there be conflict between an elected PCC and the CPS?

Matthew Grove, in Humberside, has taken to criticising the failure of the present system of police authorities, while in the West Midlands Mike Olley has succeeded in attracting more curious publicity once again. With one candidate’s decision to attract attention to his difficulties in claiming benefits, we must ask “Is there really no such thing as bad publicity?”

Comments

Douglas Carswell MP has been busy suggesting that whether community sentences are the answer locally is really a matter for Police and Crime Commissioners, rather than the Home Secretary.

Michael Crick has been drawing attention to the significance of earnings and tax returns being released by London Mayoral candidates, including Brian Paddick’s annual police pension of £63,397. With recently retired senior officers pitching for PCC roles instead of retirement, how long can it be before this becomes an issue in the PCC elections? Remember, you really did hear it here first, and for the record, TopOfTheCops is against it, taking the traditional British attitude that it is vulgar to ask people to disclose their earnings.

The Home Secretary has responded to Winsor 2 with a Written Ministerial Statement. Sceptics have pointed to the Prime Minister’s longstanding views on Police Reform to suggest a degree of inevitability.

Toby James has written about worries surrounding the management of the Police and Crime Commissioner election process.

The Home Office have put their latest Police and Crime Commissioner bulletin online.

The EIP conference saw senior Home Office civil servant Stephen Rimmer suggest that Chief officers and Police Authority chief executives need to engage with PCC candidates to help inform them before the elections, while Sir Hugh Orde said he had some difficulty with former police officers standing for PCC posts. Meanwhile Lancashire Chief Constable Steve Finnigan expressed the need to get back to business as usual, having rightly obsessed about spending reductions over the last 2 years, raising issues for those whose campaigns are about resisting cuts, or dependent on how skillful they are at making cuts, as both these tactics threaten to be out of date by the time the elections are over.

The North Yorkshire Police Federation raised the possibility of the Federation sponsoring certain PCC candidates, leading to discussions on the legality, practicalities and wisdom of such a move.

At Leveson, Sir Hugh Orde suggested PCCs will need separate media operations from their police forces (See para 17 at the link – the devil really is in the detail!)

Context

The Liverpool Daily Post wondered just how effective social media was in British elections, concluding that it was better for candidates in influencing their selections than their elections.

Sean O’Neill pointed everyone to evidence of how bitter it got at the top of Scotland Yard, referencing Sir Paul Stephenson’s 2nd statement to Leveson

As blogger Inspector Gadget and many others got irritated at blanket assertions about police officers being racist, North Yorkshire PCC hopeful Peter Walker thought it was “Ironic that a person who criticises Police for stereotyping should make offensive comments based on – a stereotype!”

Lancashire Police Authority turned on their election website, and very nice it is too.

On LabourList, Mark Ferguson said Ed Miliband had a flawed approach to antisocial behaviour.

And April Fools Day brought worries about the merger of Lancashire and Yorkshire into the new County of Larkshire! While you’re laughing, and wondering if PCCs would ever try something like that, be aware that to their eternal shame Lancashire Police Authority, supported by senior officers, cosied up to Cumbria under the last government with just such an intention.

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Weekend Update Part 2 – Sunday 8 April 2012

Runners

Since the last full update the following candidates are now running:-

Keith Hunter , Mike Caseman-Jones , Vera Baird (interviewed here with a leaflet here) and Bernard Rix

What’s up? Names sound familiar? Know about them already? Uh-huh. Check the links. I meant “running”, not for election, but as in that activity that looks like walking gone wrong and tests out the condition of middle-aged candidates’ hearts. They are all running and tweeting about it, like they’re proud instead of mental. Bernard Rix is doing a freakin’ marathon. What is wrong with these people? Is the local election doorstep not enough?

In the running

Ah yes, that’s more like it – the following hopefuls have all declared on Twitter that they have made it on to the respective shortlists for the Labour nomination in their areas, which means they will now be on a postal ballot form for local Labour members:- Jordan Newell in Essex, Olly Martins in Bedfordshire, Paul Richards in Sussex, Harriet Yeo in Kent, Jon Harvey in Thames Valley, and Tal Michael in North Wales. On the web we also have Steve Carter, seeking the Labour nomination in Cheshire, and Ibrahim Master, after the Labour nomination in Lancashire.

Their presence on a shortlist as opposed to being a selected candidate also indicates that that there is at least one other person on each of those lists who we may not know at this stage.

Other things we don’t know are precisely who this was saying they would not run in Humberside (hat-tip to Jon Collins for spotting that), and the names of any selected or shortlisted Tory candidates, though Kevin Horkin’s tweet that he has taken part in the first round of official selection interviews for PCC suggests this is because the shortlisting is incomplete. Indeed, this article, in April, still seeking new Conservative applicants in South and West Yorkshire, or ‘lambs to the slaughter’ as we might call them if the Police Foundation research is anything to go by, suggests it may be some time yet before it’s all wrapped up.

In the meantime, this article has Cllr Mike Jordan applying for the Conservative nomination for PCC in North Yorkshire, and suggesting Ian Gillies, Leader of the Conservatives at York City Council, is doing the same, joining North Yorkshire county councillors Carl Les and Jane Kenyon, and “former police inspector Peter Walker”. I hate to split hairs seeing as it was only 5 ranks off, but he was actually a Deputy Chief Constable.

This article has Conservatives Humfrey Malins and Andrew Povey interested in the role in Surrey, where Nick O’Shea is rumoured as a possible Lib-Dem candidate. Well-done to that journalist for finding a Lib-Dem candidate in the wild. They are rumoured here to be an endangered species, and this stacks up with my own experience where Chorley Borough Council only has one ward where a Lib-Dem is standing. If this keeps up, soon there may be no-one for no-one to vote for.

Which reminds me…

… of the Survation/Mail On Sunday poll giving UKIP and the Lib-Dems joint third place on 11% each, leading Nigel Farage to complain “UKIP on 11% in the polls, neck and neck with the Lib Dems. Yet the BBC will still insist on promoting the Greens…”, which may be a reference to the Newsnight selection of participants for their Mayoral debate.

Farage also said “And anyway, The pasty tax has been tried before, in 19th Century Cornwall. The pie-rates of Penzance.“, which is more corny than Cornish, and isn’t as good as the gem Brony Rudkin found in the Independent on Sunday “Tory cash spin” is anagram of “Cornish Pasty

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A Holiday treat for fans of “The Thick of It”

I stumbled across some BBC filming a week ago in Westminster, and used a photo of Peter Capaldi practicing his lines as “Malcolm Tucker” to Armando Iannucci, who makes this stuff happen. My point was that passing American tourists had mistaken pretend politics for normal politics, and we should not make the same mistake with the Bradford West by-election result that no-one at the time understood.

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More from “The Thick of It”

Simply mentioning “Thick of It” character Malcolm Tucker (played by Peter Capaldi), together with this photo of some filming I came across a week ago at Westminster has caused a lot of excitement on the Capaldi-obsessed parts of the net. Wish I had taken more photos now. Well, this was the best shot, but I did take a couple more, which I’m thinking of posting if there is sufficient interest.

And all you people interested in fictional British politics are welcome to stay and enjoy the coverage of possibly the most unusual election in real British politics for some time.

What do you think? Should I post a couple more shots?

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Passover Weekend Update – Part 1 – Friday 6 April

Frequent flyers here at TopOfTheCops will know that a constant stream of news and views made for none of our regular updates last weekend, but the good news is that we now have a four-day weekend to make up for it. So, in no particular order:-

Thames Valley Shocker

For a long-time now, Jon S Harvey, frequent commenter on these pages and a Labour Town Councillor in Buckingham, has been writing articles aplenty on the Police and Crime Commissioner elections, and question, after question, after question, for folk to ask the candidates, while repeatedly avoiding my questions of a “so, are you running or not” nature. Today he changed his ways and announced that he was on the Labour shortlist for the Thames Valley Police area. There is great joy in heaven over every sinner that repenteth, though I expect that we ought now to be in line for answer, after answer, after answer to those questions.

I don’t know if he has taken umbrage at my suggestion that his assertion that Ken Livingtone’s tax arrangements were a non-story amounted to defending the indefensible but, instead of a Candidate Statement, he has pointed me, and therefore you, to his website only.

As the Police Foundation research into voting in Police Areas suggests that Thames Valley, the Prime Minister’s own area, falls to the Conservatives in four out of, er, four scenarios, and as Cllr Harvey’s own website talks of the achievement last year of getting as high as 1 Labour district councillor in Buckingham last year, the revelation that he is one of two candidates on the Labour shortlist suggests that this nomination is being sought by both the Labour party members in the area! Welcome to the race, Jon! And yes, I know that I haven’t yet answered my own question either.

Jack Straw Speaks

You may remember that when Michael Crick said the closing of the Labour nomination had brought no more notables, TopOfTheCops interpreted that to mean “No Jack Straw then.” Well, Ibrahim Master, Independent Member of Lancashire Police Authority and shortlisted candidate for the Lancashire Labour PCC nomination, has launched a website which claims Jack Straw’s endorsement. As Mr Master is a longstanding friend of Jack, it’s unlikely to be an idle boast.

What is everyone talking about?

The folk at CREST Advisory have been busy again, this week sending out a Twitpic wordcloud analysing social media traffic on the Police and Crime Commissioner elections, showing that some people and areas are subject to more mention than others. I’d humbly advise readers to check the top right of the graphic!

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…and Paddick makes three

Brian Paddick’s crime policies are, well, not as exciting as you’d think.

He is the only one of the London Mayoral candidates with police experience, and plenty of it, at a senior level, so why are the crime policies so dull? Is it because he actually used up all his ideas while in the job? Is it because he doesn’t really expect to win? Anyway, here they are:-

  • Local policing plans based on local communities priorities and crime surveys – a police only version of what has been a legal requirement since the Crime and Disorder Act 1998.
  • “Increasing the number of police officers in the Met to 33,500” – another vote for more spending on more police
  • “Increasing the visibility of uniformed officers at busy travel interchanges” – Flourescent yellow jackets not enough? Perhaps they could be decorated in fairy lights?
  • “Better stop and search.” Better, how?
  • “We will stop police targeting innocent people and accurately target the power on criminals” – how?
  • “Tough payback sentences. Those convicted of criminal offences will be made to work in the community to repay their debt to society.” Sounds like Boris but without the detail.
  • “Paddick patrols. We will help Londoners who want to reclaim their streets by working with community groups such as residents and tenants associations patrolling in groups.” Where Boris has more specials, this sounds like Ken’s Streetwatch, but more vigilante – a Liberal Lynch mob?

Er, that’s it. There isn’t any more.

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