UK Parliament / Open data

Police Reform and Social Responsibility Bill

The Minister may have misunderstood what I was saying on a point that I made earlier on. It is not that the ability of the Assembly to vary local plans runs across the thrust of government policy. I understand that the thrust of government policy is to release local energies to determine what the priorities are. If that is the case and you then say that the London Assembly cannot vary what is being determined locally, does that not cut across the sort of localism that the Government say they want? This is not about the problems of the Assembly interfering with national strategies or requirements; it is about the ability of the Assembly to say, ““These are the local priorities””. Where there is a clear two-thirds margin—a pretty high target—that is something that the MOPC would have to take on board. I cannot understand why the Government are saying that policing is different from spatial development strategy—say, the size of strategic tall buildings, the size of the congestion zone area or any of those other issues. These are not laid down nationally; they are determined locally. Of course the Mayor of London has been elected with a manifesto but the London Assembly, representing all parts of London, may well say, by a two-thirds majority, ““We think that you should take this back and review it””. That is what the Government are saying could happen in those other areas—why are they not saying that it can happen with regard to policing?
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
729 c61 
Session
2010-12
Chamber / Committee
House of Lords chamber
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