UK Parliament / Open data

Crime and Policing

Proceeding contribution from Baroness May of Maidenhead (Conservative) in the House of Commons on Wednesday, 8 September 2010. It occurred during Opposition day on Crime and Policing.
I say to the shadow Home Secretary that I am deeply disappointed in what he is saying. I will tell him who that statistic means something to—it means something to my constituents, and to those of other hon. Members, when they do not see police on the streets. They know the reality, but sadly the shadow Home Secretary is not willing to accept it. The reality is that because of things that his Government did we have seen that police officers have been tied up in bureaucracy and red tape, kept in police stations filling in forms when they could have been out on the streets, where people want to see them and where they want to be. This is not just about the bureaucracy faced by police officers; the previous Labour Government passed a record number of laws, but left office with nearly 900,000 violent crimes taking place a year. They spent a record amount on criminal justice, but they left office with 26,000 victims of crime every single day. Labour Members might think that that is a record to be proud of, but we do not and neither do the British people.
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
515 c359-60 
Session
2010-12
Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamber
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