Crime and Policing Bill 2025: equality impact assessments
Why linked: Equality impact assessments for Crime and Policing Bill - substantive policy analysis
Equality impact assessments relating to the Crime and Policing Bill 2025.
The Police Reform Bill announced in the King's Speech 2026 is the Home Office's legislative vehicle to enact the January/March 2026 White Paper 'From local to national: a new model for policing', creating a National Police Service (absorbing the NCA, Counter Terrorism Policing, the College of Policing and the NPCC), establishing Local Policing Areas, abolishing Police and Crime Commissioners, and putting police vetting, performance and live facial recognition on a statutory footing.
The Government bills this as the most significant police reform in nearly 200 years, restructuring the 43-force model, ending the PCC settlement under the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011, and centralising standards-setting in a single national force — with direct consequences for governance, funding distribution, workforce strategy and the legal framework for facial recognition.
Pre-legislative: the Bill was announced in the King's Speech 2026 (13 May 2026) but has not yet been introduced. Work continues via the White Paper, the Police Performance Framework, and the parallel Crime and Policing Act 2026 (which received Royal Assent on 29 April 2026 and carries interim measures including guidance on FPN issuance by authorised persons and a duty to publish a proscription-regime statement).
Sets out the Bill's four pillars: Local Policing Areas under senior officers; a new National Police Service absorbing the NCA, CTP, the College and NPCC; abolition of PCCs with successor arrangements; a statutory framework for police use of facial recognition.
Home Office White Paper setting out the comprehensive reform package the Police Reform Bill will legislate, including replacing PCCs with directly elected mayors / Policing and Crime Boards and reducing the number of forces.
Accessible HTML version of the White Paper containing the Home Secretary's foreword and the executive summary detailing the National Police Service, Local Policing Guarantee, Police.AI and Live Facial Recognition commitments.
Sets out how the Home Office will measure police performance across the breadth of crime and policing activity — the data backbone for the Bill's new performance system.
HMICFRS inspection programme under Schedule 4A Police Act 1996 — the inspectorate vehicle through which the Bill's new minimum standards will be enforced.
Received Royal Assent on 29 April 2026; carries interim reforms (FPN guidance, proscription-regime statement duty, ECHR memoranda) that sit alongside but separate from the forthcoming Police Reform Bill.
Home Office factsheet explaining the integrity-related provisions of the 2026 Act — relevant to the parallel vetting and conduct strands the Police Reform Bill will extend.
Defines the College's governance relationship with the Home Office — the entity that will be folded into the National Police Service under the Bill.
Defines IOPC governance — the conduct regulator whose remit will interact with the Bill's new vetting and performance regime.
Public Accounts Committee report criticising Home Office monitoring and questioning whether the data exists to track £354m of planned savings by 2028-29 — directly bears on the Bill's performance and efficiency claims.
Independent Public Bodies Review of the IOPC, recommending governance reforms picked up in the April 2026 IOPC framework document.
Commons Library briefing on existing structures and the White Paper's proposals — a baseline reference for parliamentary scrutiny of the Bill.
Departmental submission setting out workforce baseline and pay context — relevant evidence base for the Bill's workforce-strategy commitments.
Final grant allocations to PCCs for 2026-27 — the funding settlement the Bill's review of the police funding formula will eventually replace.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood's announcement framing the reforms as the largest in two centuries, including 13,000 additional neighbourhood policing personnel and abolition of PCCs.
Speech to the NPCC/APCC partnership summit setting out the political case for the reform programme — the political predecessor to the White Paper.
Statutory Policing Protocol under s.79 of the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 — the PCC-era governance instrument the Bill will supersede.
My Ministers will push forward with significant reforms to the police
Why linked: The King's Speech 2026 explicitly names the Police Reform Bill as a Government priority and the briefing notes set out the National Police Service, Local Policing Areas, abolition of PCCs, statutory Strategic Policing Priorities, performance system, and statutory framework for facial recognition.
The Government will deliver 13,000 additional neighbourhood policing personnel into roles across England and Wales by the end of this Parliament.
Why linked: Recurring numerical commitment in both the King's Speech briefing and the White Paper foreword, with progress (3,100 by February 2026) reported as the baseline against which the Bill will be judged.
We will therefore abolish PCCs, replacing them with directly elected mayors, and where mayors do not yet exist, with Policing and Crime Boards made up of local council leaders.
Why linked: Headline governance commitment in the White Paper which the Police Reform Bill must legislate by amending or repealing parts of the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011.
Over this Parliament and the next we will radically reform the structure of policing, significantly reducing the number of police forces.
Why linked: Structural commitment in the White Paper setting up the independent force-structures review reporting in summer 2026 — a forward milestone for the Bill's design.
Establish a new legal framework to underpin law enforcement use of facial recognition and similar technologies… including creation of a single, expert regulatory body to provide independent advice and oversight.
Why linked: Distinct legislative commitment within the Police Reform Bill briefing that creates a new statutory regime alongside the National Police Service and Local Policing Areas reforms.
Why linked: Equality impact assessments for Crime and Policing Bill - substantive policy analysis
Equality impact assessments relating to the Crime and Policing Bill 2025.
Why linked: Economic notes for Crime and Policing Bill - impact analysis on police reform
Economic notes relating to the Crime and Policing Bill 2025.
Why linked: ECHR supplementary memorandum for Crime and Policing Bill - constitutional scrutiny
ECHR supplementary memorandum for Crime and Policing Bill - constitutional scrutiny
In response to: Crime and Policing Bill 2025: ECHR supplementary memoranda
Why linked: ECHR supplementary memorandum for Crime and Policing Bill - constitutional scrutiny
ECHR supplementary memorandum for Crime and Policing Bill - constitutional scrutiny
In response to: Crime and Policing Bill 2025: ECHR supplementary memoranda
Why linked: ECHR supplementary memorandum for Crime and Policing Bill - constitutional scrutiny
ECHR supplementary memorandum for Crime and Policing Bill - constitutional scrutiny
In response to: Crime and Policing Bill 2025: ECHR supplementary memoranda
Why linked: Delegated powers memorandum for Police Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny phase
Delegated powers memorandum for Police Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny phase
In response to: Crime and Policing Bill 2025: delegated powers memoranda
Why linked: Delegated powers memorandum for Police Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny phase
Delegated powers memorandum for Police Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny phase
In response to: Crime and Policing Bill 2025: delegated powers memoranda
Why linked: Delegated powers memorandum for Police Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny phase
Delegated powers memorandum for Police Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny phase
In response to: Crime and Policing Bill 2025: delegated powers memoranda
Why linked: Delegated powers memorandum for Police Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny phase
Delegated powers memorandum for Police Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny phase
In response to: Crime and Policing Bill 2025: delegated powers memoranda
Why linked: Delegated powers memorandum for Police Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny phase
Delegated powers memorandum for Police Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny phase
In response to: Crime and Policing Bill 2025: delegated powers memoranda
Why linked: Commons Library briefing CBP-8582 'Policing in the UK: Current structures and proposals for reform' (March 2026), the standard parliamentary scrutiny baseline for the Police Reform Bill.
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-8582) The government’s white paper on police reform was published in January 2026 and may lead to the biggest changes to policing structures since the 1970s.
Why linked: Seventh Supplementary Delegated Powers Memorandum - formal scrutiny document
Why linked: Sixth Supplementary Delegated Powers Memorandum - formal scrutiny document
Why linked: Fifth Supplementary Delegated Powers Memorandum - formal scrutiny document
Why linked: Commons debate pack on Police Grant Report 2026/27; parliamentary approval of police funding allocation framework
Type: Commons Debate Pack (CDP-2026-0035) Motion to approve the Police Grant Report (England and Wales) 2026/27 on Wednesday 11 February 2026. This is how Parliament approves the central police funding allocation for each force every financial year.
Why linked: Third Supplementary Delegated Powers Memorandum - formal scrutiny document
Why linked: Second Supplementary Delegated Powers Memorandum - formal scrutiny of delegated powers in Crime and Policing Bill
Why linked: Supplementary Delegated Powers Memorandum - additional scrutiny of delegated powers provisions in the bill
Why linked: HL Bill 111 Explanatory Notes - official bill documentation
Why linked: Impact Assessment from Ministry of Justice - mandatory policy document analyzing effects of the Crime and Policing Bill
Why linked: Delegated Powers Memorandum from Home Office and other departments - essential scrutiny document for legislative powers framework
Why linked: Explanatory Notes for Crime and Policing Bill - core legislative document essential for understanding the bill's intent and scope
Why linked: Motion to approve Police Grant Report (England and Wales) 2025/26 - parliamentary scrutiny of police funding and resource allocation framework in scope
Type: Commons Debate Pack (CDP-2025-0031) Motion to approve the Police Grant Report (England and Wales) 2025/26 on Wednesday 5 February 2025. This is how Parliament approves the central police funding allocation for each force every financial year.
Why linked: Motion to approve Police Grant Report (England and Wales) 2024/25 - parliamentary scrutiny of police funding and resource allocation
Type: Commons Debate Pack (CDP-2024-0029) Motion to approve the Police Grant Report (England and Wales) 2024/25 on Wednesday 7 February 2024. This is how Parliament approves the central police funding allocation for each force every financial year.
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Police Reform Bill
Type: Research Paper (RP02-15) Police Reform Bill (HL) (Bill 48 of 2001/02). House of Commons Library Research Paper 02/15
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The Police Reform Bill announced in the King's Speech 2026 1 is the legislative vehicle for the most substantial reordering of policing in England and Wales in nearly two centuries. Built on the Home Office's January / March 2026 White Paper 'From local to national: a new model for policing' 23, it would create a new statutory National Police Service absorbing the National Crime Agency (NCA), Counter Terrorism Policing (CTP), the College of Policing and the National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC); replace Police and Crime Commissioners with directly elected mayors or Policing and Crime Boards; force reduction; and put police use of facial recognition on a statutory basis under a new single regulator 1. The Bill is not yet introduced. The parallel Crime and Policing Act 2026 received Royal Assent on 29 April 2026 and carries interim measures, including statutory guidance on fixed penalty notice (FPN) issuance by authorised persons within six months and a duty to publish a statement on the proscription regime.
The thread sits at pre-legislative stage with substantial supporting infrastructure already in place. The Home Secretary announced the package in January 2026 1 and the White Paper was published the following day, with an accessible HTML version reproducing the executive summary 23. The Police Performance Framework (January 2026) 4 supplies the data architecture, and HMICFRS's 2025-29 inspection programme under Schedule 4A of the Police Act 1996 5 supplies the enforcement vehicle for the Bill's new minimum standards. Two key bodies that the Bill will fold into the National Police Service — the College of Policing and the IOPC — received fresh Home Office framework documents in April 2026 67, which are likely the last governance settlements for those bodies in their current form. The Public Accounts Committee's January 2026 report on policing productivity 8 sits as the principal scrutiny baseline, criticising the Home Office's 'hands-off' monitoring of forces and questioning whether the data exists to track £354m of planned savings to 2028-29 91011. The 2026-27 police grant settlement 12 is the funding context against which the Bill's promised funding-formula review will eventually run.
Five strands have moved in the last three months. First, the King's Speech 2026 briefing notes 1 re-confirmed all four pillars of the Bill (Local Policing Areas, the National Police Service, abolition of PCCs, statutory facial recognition) and reiterated the 13,000 neighbourhood policing personnel commitment, with 3,100 delivered by February 2026. Second, the parallel Crime and Policing Bill — now the Crime and Policing Act 2026 — completed ping-pong: the HL Bill 194 paper from April 2026 records the final Commons-Lords exchange on FPN guidance and the proscription-regime statement duty, in which the Lords ultimately accepted Commons amendments 2K/2L imposing a six-month deadline on the Secretary of State to issue FPN guidance, and the Commons disagreed with Lords amendments 359/439 on Iran-related proscription review in favour of a broader proscription-regime statement duty (439C/439D). Third, the Senedd refused legislative consent to the Crime and Policing Bill on 10 March 2026 2 while the Scottish Parliament agreed it on 24 March 2026 3 — a consent split likely to recur with the Police Reform Bill. Fourth, the College of Policing and IOPC framework documents 45 were issued. Fifth, the College launched its stop-and-search APP consultation 6 as part of its continuing standards work.
Three watch items dominate the next twelve months. (1) The independent review of police force structures, commissioned in the White Paper, is due to report in summer 2026 and will determine the geography of force amalgamation; the Bill is unlikely to be introduced in final form before it lands. The Blunkett-Herbert independent review of police leadership reports on the same timetable and will shape the Licence to Practise design. (2) The Crime and Policing Act 2026 sets a hard six-month deadline (counting from Royal Assent on 29 April 2026 ) for the Secretary of State to issue statutory guidance on FPN issuance under amended ss.56 and 73 of the Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014, and an equivalent six-month deadline to publish a statement on the proscription regime under s.3 Terrorism Act 2000 — both fall on or around 29 October 2026 and are concrete process deliverables. (3) The Public Accounts Committee report 1 left a live fiscal-credibility question on the £354m savings target by 2028-29 2; the Government response is overdue against the standard Treasury Minute timetable and will be the first material public-finances test of the reform programme. Senedd consent 3 is the secondary watch point — a refusal on the Police Reform Bill would create a structural devolution problem the Crime and Policing Bill experience suggests is unresolved.
Three risks are explicitly supported by the corpus. (1) The PAC report 1 questions whether the Home Office can monitor progress towards £354m of savings by 2028-29 2, directly impugning the Bill's productivity case. (2) The Senedd's refusal of legislative consent on the Crime and Policing Bill 3 flags a structural Wales-consent issue that the Police Reform Bill's National Police Service will likely reproduce. (3) The Lords Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee issued at least seven supplementary memoranda on the Crime and Policing Bill 45678910, signalling that the Police Reform Bill — which creates new regulators (facial recognition) and a new national body (NPS) — will face equivalent scrutiny on regulator-creation by SI. Inferred from corpus gap: no draft Police Reform Bill, no pre-legislative scrutiny terms of reference, and no consultation paper on PCC abolition appear in the corpus — material absences for a reform of this scale.
This briefing covers the Police Reform Bill announced in the King's Speech 2026 and the upstream White Paper, with the parallel Crime and Policing Act 2026 treated as adjacent because it carries interim measures (FPN guidance, proscription-regime statement duty, vetting integrity) that overlap with the Bill's themes without being part of it. Out of scope per the thread definition: counter-terrorism operations as such, sentencing and court procedure, prisons and the CPS — the Crime and Policing Act 2026's wider provisions on sentencing or court powers are not analysed even where they share a statutory vehicle.
Bills and Acts this regime substantively depends on. Links go to the bill's own thread on this site (where available) and to bills.parliament.uk.
The principal legislative vehicle for this thread; announced in the King's Speech 2026 but not yet introduced as a numbered Bill, so no parliament_id is available.
Received Royal Assent on 29 April 2026; carries interim measures (FPN guidance under ss.56 and 73 of the Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014, a duty to publish a statement on the proscription regime, and police integrity measures) that sit alongside but separate from the Police Reform Bill.
The underlying statute governing police forces, the Strategic Policing Requirement (s.37A) and the HMICFRS inspection regime (Schedule 4A) — the Police Reform Bill will amend it to seat the new performance system and force-amalgamation architecture.
Creates Police and Crime Commissioners and the Policing Protocol (s.79). The Police Reform Bill will abolish PCCs and replace the governance settlement created by this Act.
The Police Reform Bill is a governance reconstruction layered on top of a long-standing operational statute (Police Act 1996) and an intervening governance statute (Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011). Its first doctrinal layer rewrites the local-tier settlement: replacing PCCs created by the 2011 Act with mayors or Policing and Crime Boards, and putting Local Policing Areas inside each force on a statutory footing. The Policing Protocol Order 2023 — itself made under s.79 of the 2011 Act — is therefore on the chopping block; whatever replaces it must be re-issued under whichever section of the new Bill houses the successor protocol.
The second layer creates a wholly new statutory body — the National Police Service — that consolidates the National Crime Agency, Counter Terrorism Policing, regional organised-crime capabilities, the College of Policing and the National Police Chiefs' Council. This is a substantive transfer of functions question: the College's existing powers (set in its framework document and exercised through Authorised Professional Practice) and the NCA's powers under the Crime and Courts Act 2013 must be re-vested in the new entity, with consequential amendments across multiple Acts. The April 2026 framework documents for the College and IOPC are likely the last governance settlements for those bodies in their current form.
The third layer is performance and standards. The January 2026 Police Performance Framework provides the data architecture; HMICFRS's inspection programme under Sch 4A Police Act 1996 will be the enforcement vehicle, supplemented by new Home Secretary powers to dismiss Chief Constables and 'turnaround teams' for failing forces. The Bill must therefore amend Sch 4A and the Police Act 1996 ss.40 / 40A intervention powers.
The fourth layer is a free-standing statutory regime for police facial recognition and 'similar technologies' under a new single regulator. This is a fresh body of law rather than an amendment to existing statutes — it must define when use is justified, who authorises deployments, and how the new regulator interacts with the Information Commissioner, the existing Biometrics and Surveillance Camera Commissioner, and HMICFRS.
What the Bill cannot do via the King's Speech vehicle alone is alter the operational independence of the office of constable, which derives from common law and the Police Act 1996; the White Paper signals a 'Licence to Practise' which would require careful drafting to avoid trespassing on that independence.
A new national police force consolidating the NCA, CTP, regional organised crime capabilities, the College of Policing and the NPCC.
A statutorily defined sub-force unit headed by a senior officer responsible to the public for delivering the policing their community needs.
A successor governance body to the PCC for areas where no directly elected mayor exists, composed of local council leaders.
A single statutory set of policing priorities issued by the Home Office to align all forces.
An accreditation regime for police officers underpinning the office of constable for the 21st century.
Independent review of police force structures (commissioned in the White Paper) due to report in summer 2026.
Blunkett-Herbert independent review of police leadership reports.
Introduction of the Police Reform Bill itself — King's Speech 2026 names it but it is not yet in Parliament's catalogue.
Outcome of the College of Policing's consultation on stop-and-search Authorised Professional Practice (currently open).
Government response to the PAC's January 2026 policing productivity report (overdue against the standard Treasury Minute timetable).
Owns the reform package: characterises it as the most significant police reform in nearly 200 years, with a National Police Service, Local Policing Areas, abolition of PCCs, fewer larger forces and a statutory facial-recognition framework. Defends the £350m efficiency claim and the 13,000 neighbourhood officers target as the operational baseline.May 2026Mar 2026Jan 2026
Tension with Public Accounts Committee, Senedd Cymru
Frames the reforms in the White Paper foreword as renewing Peel's model for the 21st century, arguing the 43-force model is no longer fit for purpose and that operational standards have varied unacceptably across forces.Jan 2026Mar 2026
Publicly supportive: NPCC quoted in the King's Speech briefing as calling this 'the most significant change in policing in the last half a century' and welcoming consolidation of national functions, while accepting that the current 43-force 'postcode lottery' is inefficient.May 2026
On policing productivity: critical of the Home Office's 'hands-off' monitoring of forces and unable to confirm that data exists to track the £354m savings to 2028-29; flags slow adoption of innovative technologies (LFR, AV multimedia redaction) across 43 forces, directly bearing on the Bill's efficiency case.Jan 2026Jan 2026Jan 2026Jan 2026
Tension with Home Office
On the parallel Crime and Policing Bill: issued multiple supplementary reports on the Bill's growing pile of delegated powers, signalling that the Police Reform Bill — with similar regulator-creation and standards-setting powers — will face equivalent scrutiny.Dec 2025Mar 2026Feb 2026Feb 2026
On the Crime and Policing Bill 2026: did not approve the Legislative Consent Motion on 10 March 2026, an unresolved consent dispute that is likely to repeat with the Police Reform Bill given the cross-border policing structures the Bill creates.Mar 2026
Tension with Home Office
On the Crime and Policing Bill: approved the LCM on 24 March 2026, providing a baseline comparator for how Scotland may engage with the Police Reform Bill's Scotland-facing reserved provisions.Mar 2026
Engaged but at institutional risk: continues to issue Authorised Professional Practice (stop-and-search consultation, operations and response guidance) and published its 2024-25 annual report, while being explicitly named as a body to be subsumed into the National Police Service.Feb 2026Apr 2026Aug 2025Apr 2026
Position framed by the March 2024 Public Body Review and its implementation: accepting governance reforms, reporting to the Home Affairs Committee on implementation progress, and operating within a remit that the Bill's new vetting / Licence to Practise regime will reshape.Feb 2026Mar 2024Mar 2024Apr 2026
Scrutinising the Home Office's oversight role: tabled PQ UIN 114412 asking what role the Home Office plays where public confidence in policing has been undermined — a question that the new Police Performance Framework and intervention powers are intended to answer.Feb 2026
Lead Lords opposition interlocutor on the Crime and Policing Bill across Committee, Report and Third Reading stages — recipient of every government 'will write' letter on amendments from October 2025 through March 2026, indicating the substantive Lords scrutiny line he will carry into the Police Reform Bill.Apr 2026Apr 2026Apr 2026Apr 2026Apr 2026Apr 2026Apr 2026
Conservative opposition spokesperson on the Crime and Policing Bill at Commons stages — recipient of ministerial 'will write' correspondence on Report-stage amendments and the natural opposition lead on the Police Reform Bill at Second Reading.Apr 2026Apr 2026
On the Crime and Policing Bill: provided academic written evidence (CPB89) to the Commons Public Bill Committee, signalling an external research voice likely to engage equivalently with the Police Reform Bill.Apr 2025
On the Crime and Policing Bill: submitted scrutiny evidence (CPB09) on the Bill's impact assessments, indicating it will likely opine on the Police Reform Bill's impact assessment given the £350m savings claim under challenge.Mar 2025
Chair of the College of Policing and co-chair of the Blunkett-Herbert independent police leadership review reporting summer 2026 — both positions place him at the centre of the workforce-strategy strand of the Bill.Jul 2025