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Policing policy

Lifecycle: Implementation College of Policing · Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee · Home Affairs Committee · Home Office · Northern Ireland Affairs Committee · Public Accounts Committee Last regenerated 1 week, 5 days ago

Summary

What this is

The policing policy thread covers the legal and institutional framework for how police forces in England and Wales (and, in places, the wider UK) are organised, funded, held accountable and empowered — anchored by the Crime and Policing Act 2026, the January 2026 police-reform White Paper, and the vetting/conduct SIs.

Why it matters

The Act overhauls police powers and integrity rules while the White Paper proposes the most significant governance change in over a decade — abolition of Police and Crime Commissioners and creation of a National Police Service — against a backdrop of contested funding and productivity scrutiny.

Current status

The Crime and Policing Act 2026 received Royal Assent on 29 April 2026 after extended Lords/Commons ping-pong; the White Paper governance reforms are at proposal stage and commencement of Act provisions (e.g. s.47) is being probed by PQs.

What changed recently

  • 4 Jun 2026 — Home Office published the second edition of police use-of-force statistics for England and Wales, April 2024–March 2025.
  • 21 May 2026 — PQ asked the Home Secretary for a timeline for bringing into force section 47 of the Crime and Policing Act 2026 — a commencement-gap signal.
  • 29 Apr 2026 — Crime and Policing Act 2026 received Royal Assent (c. 20) after the Lords/Commons disagreement over FPN guidance and Iran-proscription review amendments was resolved.
  • 27 Apr 2026 — Stop and search authorised professional practice (APP) consultation opened by the College of Policing.
  • 28 Jan 2026 — PAC report found the Home Office 'does not understand how wider policy changes affect demand on police resources' and confirmed the £19.6bn 2026-27 settlement.

Key documents

Framework

  • Act

    Crime and Policing Act 2026 (c. 20)

    Principal new statute on antisocial behaviour, offensive weapons, police powers and policing integrity; received Royal Assent 29 April 2026.

  • White Paper

    From local to national: a new model for policing (White Paper)

    January 2026 White Paper proposing a National Police Service, stronger national standards, a new police performance framework and abolition of PCCs.

Statutory basis

Operationalising

Implementation

Scrutiny

Evidence

Consultations

Stakeholders

Sponsoring department 1

  • Home Office → src
    Sponsoring department for the Crime and Policing Act 2026, the police-reform White Paper, vetting/conduct SIs and the annual police grant settlements.

Sponsoring minister 3

  • Sarah Jones → src
    Labour, then Minister of State for Policing and Crime when she signed the final 2026-27 police funding settlement WMS (HCWS1285) and the 13 Nov 2025 Police Reform WMS announcing PCC abolition.
  • Lord Hanson of Flint → src
    Labour (Lords), then Minister of State at the Home Office when he made the Lords WMS counterparts on the 2026-27 settlement and Police Reform; led several Lords ping-pong motions on the Crime and Policing Bill.
  • Dame Diana Johnson → src
    Labour, then Minister of State for Policing, Fire and Crime Prevention (WMS, Jan 2025–Feb 2025) on the 2025-26 settlement and the IOPC annual report.

Lead committee 4

  • Public Accounts Committee → src
    Took evidence on police productivity off the back of the NAO report and concluded (Jan 2026) the Home Office does not understand demand on police resources.
  • Home Affairs Committee → src
    Reported on police misconduct/disciplinary processes (2023) and on policing of summer 2024 disorder (April 2025), recommending a retention strategy and IOPC-process reform.
  • Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee
    Lords DPRRC issued its 33rd and 41st Reports scrutinising the delegated powers in the Crime and Policing Bill.
  • Northern Ireland Affairs Committee → src
    Reported on the future of policing/PSNI funding, noting the rising policing budget and ring-fenced funding for the PSNI workforce recovery.

Regulator / delivery programme 4

  • College of Policing → src
    Sets professional standards/authorised professional practice; subject of a Home Office framework document and consultations on stop and search and operations/response guidance.
  • Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) → src
    Police conduct regulator; subject of a framework document, a 2024 public body review and recurring annual-report WMSs; correspondence on Maccabi Tel Aviv ban and Fairfield Review.
  • His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) → src
    Publishes the annual State of Policing assessment under Schedule 4A to the Police Act 1996 inspection framework.
  • National Audit Office → src
    Published Increasing Police Productivity (Nov 2025), the C&AG report underpinning PAC's productivity inquiry.

Shadow minister 3

  • Chris Philp → src
    Conservative, then Minister of State for Crime, Policing and Fire (WMS, 2024) on the Policing Productivity Review response and the 2024-25 settlement.
  • James Cleverly → src
    Conservative, then Home Secretary (WMS, 2024) on police misconduct and investigations and the IOPC annual report.
  • Lord Sharpe of Epsom → src
    Conservative (Lords), then Parliamentary Under-Secretary at the Home Office (WMS, 2024) on the productivity review and police funding settlements.

Witnesses & evidence-givers 1

  • Sir Stephen House → src
    Submitted written evidence to PAC's productivity inquiry, arguing policing productivity must be considered in the context of an effective end-to-end criminal justice process.

Other 1

  • West Midlands Police and Crime Commissioner → src
    Corresponded with a committee over the Aston Villa v Maccabi Tel Aviv fixture policing decision (Nov 2025).

Political commitments

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Police and crime commissioners to be scrapped

    Abolish Police and Crime Commissioners and create a National Police Service

    Police and crime commissioners (PCCs) will be abolished, saving the taxpayer at least £100 million and helping to fund frontline officers

    Why linked: Central governance reform announced via the White Paper and the November 2025 oral/written statement.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2026 · Crime and Policing Act 2026

    Safer Streets Mission — halve knife crime and VAWG in a decade

    This act supports the government's Safer Streets Mission to halve knife crime and violence against women and girls in a decade

    Why linked: Stated rationale for the Crime and Policing Act 2026 in the GOV.UK collection.

Found via web research

  • Gap Commencement regulations / statutory instruments bringing Crime and Policing Act 2026 provisions into force.
    No matching documents found on the open government web.

Open questions & gaps

Pending in the lifecycle

  • Commencement timetable for section 47 of the Crime and Policing Act 2026 — flagged by a May 2026 PQ asking for a timeline.
  • Legislative consent: Scottish and Welsh consent was being sought during the Bill's Lords stages (NI consent granted) — final consent positions on the enacted provisions.
  • Outcome of the College of Policing stop and search APP consultation (opened April 2026).
  • Detailed legislation/transition arrangements to implement PCC abolition and the National Police Service proposed in the White Paper.

Beyond the corpus

Confidence gaps

  • Whether the FPN-incentivisation guidance duty (the ASBCPA 2014 ss.52/68 amendments contested in ping-pong) survived in the final Act as enacted, and on what 6-month deadline.
  • Whether the Iran proscription-review amendment or the alternative 'duty to make a statement about the proscription regime' prevailed in the final Act text.