Threads / Police Reform Bill View full timeline →

Police Reform Bill

Lifecycle: Implementation College of Policing · Home Office · Public Accounts Committee Last regenerated an hour ago

Summary

What this is

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.

Why it matters

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.

Current status

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).

What changed recently

  • 13 May 2026 — King's Speech 2026 names the Police Reform Bill as a flagship measure to deliver Local Policing Areas, a National Police Service, abolition of PCCs and a statutory framework for facial recognition.
  • 29 Apr 2026 — Crime and Policing Act 2026 receives Royal Assent, carrying parallel reforms including statutory guidance on FPN issuance by authorised persons and a duty for the Secretary of State to publish a statement on the proscription regime within six months.
  • 7 Apr 2026 — Home Office publishes framework documents for the College of Policing and the IOPC, formalising governance for the two bodies most affected by the Bill's plans to fold the College into the National Police Service.
  • 30 Mar 2026 — Home Office publishes the White Paper 'From local to national: a new model for policing', the substantive blueprint underpinning the Police Reform Bill.
  • 28 Jan 2026 — Public Accounts Committee report on policing productivity criticises the Home Office's monitoring of forces and questions whether data exists to track £354m of planned savings by 2028-29.

Key documents

Framework

Operationalising

Implementation

Scrutiny

Evidence

Commentary

Other

Stakeholders

Sponsoring department 1

  • Home Office → src
    Sponsoring department; published the White Paper, the Police Performance Framework and the King's Speech 2026 Police Reform Bill briefing.

Sponsoring minister 4

  • Shabana Mahmood → src
    Home Secretary; announced the reforms in January 2026 and authored the White Paper foreword setting out the National Police Service and abolition of PCCs.
  • Dame Diana Johnson → src
    Then Minister of State for Policing, Fire and Crime Prevention when she issued HCWS411 on the IOPC Annual Report (Feb 2025) — current status unknown; treat as historical.
  • Lord Hanson of Flint → src
    Then Minister of State at the Home Office when he issued HLWS406 on the IOPC Annual Report (Feb 2025) and signed multiple Lords-stage amendment letters on the Crime and Policing Bill — current status unknown; treat as historical.
  • Sarah Jones → src
    Minister for Policing and Crime referenced in Commons selection-and-grouping papers on Lords amendments to the Crime and Policing Bill (April 2026).

Shadow minister 1

  • Matt Vickers MP → src
    Conservative opposition spokesperson; recipient of multiple ministerial 'will write' letters on Crime and Policing Bill amendments at Commons stages.

Lead committee 3

  • Public Accounts Committee → src
    Took evidence from the Home Office and College of Policing on policing productivity; report (Jan 2026) criticises Home Office monitoring of forces and the data underpinning planned £354m savings.
  • Lords Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee → src
    Issued 41st Report (Dec 2025) on the Crime and Policing Bill's delegated powers, the principal Lords scrutiny vehicle on the parallel Bill.
  • House of Commons Home Affairs Committee → src
    Conducted scrutiny correspondence with the IOPC, College of Policing and NPCC on policing culture, productivity and the IOPC Public Body Review.

Regulator / delivery programme 4

  • College of Policing → src
    Standards body that the Bill will fold into the National Police Service; published 2024-25 annual report and is consulting on stop-and-search APP and operations-and-response guidance.
  • Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) → src
    Police conduct regulator subject to the March 2024 Public Body Review and April 2026 framework document; remit interacts with the Bill's new vetting and performance regime.
  • National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) → src
    Operational chiefs body which the White Paper explicitly subsumes into the National Police Service; quoted in King's Speech briefing as supporting the reforms as 'the most significant change in policing in the last half a century'.
  • His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) → src
    Inspectorate under Schedule 4A Police Act 1996; the 2025-29 inspection programme is the enforcement vehicle for the Bill's minimum standards.

Witnesses & evidence-givers 4

  • Lord Blunkett
    Co-chair of the independent police leadership review commissioned for summer 2026, named in the White Paper as a key evidence stream feeding the Bill.
  • Lord Herbert of South Downs → src
    Co-chair of the independent police leadership review (reporting summer 2026); also chair of the College of Policing and recipient of Home Secretary correspondence on its annual accounts.
  • ESRC Vulnerability & Policing Futures Research Centre → src
    Submitted written evidence (CPB89) to the Commons Public Bill Committee on the Crime and Policing Bill.
  • Regulatory Policy Committee → src
    Submitted written evidence (CPB09) to the Commons Public Bill Committee scrutinising the Crime and Policing Bill's impact assessments.

Commentator 3

  • Martin Wrigley MP → src
    Liberal Democrat MP; tabled PQ (UIN 114412, Feb 2026) asking what role the Home Office plays in oversight and assurance where public confidence in policing has been undermined.
  • Lord Davies (Lord Davies of Gower) → src
    Opposition Lords spokesperson; recipient of all government 'will write' letters on Lords-stage amendments to the Crime and Policing Bill (Oct 2025 — March 2026).
  • Lord Katz → src
    Lords Home Office spokesperson; signatory of multiple Lords-stage 'will write' letters on the Crime and Policing Bill including police officer training and Government progress responses (Dec 2025 — March 2026).

Other 2

  • Senedd Cymru → src
    Did not approve a Legislative Consent Motion for the Crime and Policing Bill on 10 March 2026 — flagging a Welsh consent question that may recur with the Police Reform Bill.
  • Scottish Parliament → src
    Agreed a Legislative Consent Motion for the Crime and Policing Bill on 24 March 2026 — useful comparator for the Police Reform Bill's Scotland-facing provisions.

Political commitments

  • commitment King's Speech announcement Labour · 2026 · King's Speech announces Police Reform Bill

    Deliver the biggest reform to policing in decades through the Police Reform Bill

    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.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2026 · King's Speech announces Police Reform Bill

    13,000 additional neighbourhood policing personnel by end of this Parliament

    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.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2026 · From local to national: a new model for policing (accessible)

    Abolish Police and Crime Commissioners and replace with mayors / Policing and Crime Boards

    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.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2026 · From local to national: a new model for policing (accessible)

    Reduce the number of police forces alongside a new National Police Service

    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.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2026 · King's Speech announces Police Reform Bill

    Statutory framework for facial recognition with a single expert regulator

    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.

Open questions & gaps

Pending in the lifecycle

  • Independent review of police force structures (commissioned in the White Paper) due to report in summer 2026 and inform the Bill's force-amalgamation provisions.
  • Blunkett-Herbert independent police leadership review due in summer 2026.
  • Drafting and First Reading of the Police Reform Bill itself — not yet introduced as of the King's Speech.
  • Review of the police funding formula promised once reform implementation is underway.
  • Six-month deadline (running from 29 April 2026 Royal Assent) for the Secretary of State to publish FPN guidance and a statement on the proscription regime under the Crime and Policing Act 2026.

Beyond the corpus

  • MISSING A published draft Police Reform Bill or pre-legislative scrutiny terms of reference — The King's Speech announcement and White Paper exist but no draft Bill is in Parliament's catalogue at the cut-off, and pre-legislative scrutiny normally accompanies a reform of this scale.
  • MISSING Government response to the PAC's January 2026 report on policing productivity — PAC reports normally trigger a Treasury Minute response within two months; absence of a corpus document means the productivity savings claim (£354m by 2028-29) remains unanswered.
  • MISSING A consultation paper on the abolition of PCCs and successor governance design — Replacing a statutory office created by primary legislation typically attracts a formal consultation; none is in the corpus.

Confidence gaps

  • Whether the Police Reform Bill will be introduced in the 2026-27 session or held over to allow the force-structures and leadership reviews to land first.
  • Territorial extent of facial recognition provisions and how they will interact with Scottish and Welsh consent (Senedd refused LCM on the Crime and Policing Bill).
  • How operational independence of Chief Constables will be preserved given the White Paper commitment to restore the Home Secretary's power to dismiss a Chief Constable.