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Tory taxpayers to bear brunt of Reeves's squeeze on police

Tory taxpayers to bear brunt of Reeves's squeeze on police

Telegraph21 hours ago

Council taxpayers in Tory areas will bear the brunt of Rachel Reeves's squeeze on police funding, official figures show.
Police forces in rural areas, which are predominantly under Tory control, have to draw twice as much of their budgets from council taxpayers as metropolitan areas, which are largely overseen by Labour police and crime commissioners.
Conservative Surrey funds 57 per cent of its budget through its policing precept on council tax at the top of the table compared with 21.8 per cent for the West Midlands, 24.3 per cent for Merseyside and 27.1 per cent for the Metropolitan Police Service, which are all Labour-controlled, according to official data for 2024.
This disparity means that they can only plug gaps from the Chancellor's police cuts through a disproportionate reliance on their council taxpayers who face an anticipated increase of £14 on their tax bills for Band D properties, or more than five per cent.
The figures come a day after police chiefs warned Ms Reeves that the funding shortfall would mean they would be unable to deliver on the Government's pledges to put 13,000 more neighbourhood bobbies on the beat and halve knife crime and violence against women and girls.
Ms Reeves pledged police forces would get an increase of 2.3 per cent in their spending power, but this included the council tax precept on which rural areas disproportionately rely for their funding.

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Defections are ‘good thing', claims Badenoch
Defections are ‘good thing', claims Badenoch

Western Telegraph

time14 minutes ago

  • Western Telegraph

Defections are ‘good thing', claims Badenoch

Nigel Farage's Reform – which claimed to have 11,000 members north of the border – has taken a steady stream of councillors from the Tories in Scotland in recent months, most recently on Thursday when Aberdeenshire representative Lauren Knight made the move. The shift comes after the party surged in the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse Holyrood by-election, rising to third and coming close to the SNP in the seat, won by Labour's Davy Russell. Ms Badenoch spoke on Friday (Andrew Milligan/PA) But despite the perceived threat to the Tories from Reform, Ms Badenoch said she did not have an issue with people leaving for the party. 'Reform are not a centre-right party,' she told journalists at the Scottish Tory conference. 'This is a party that's talking about nationalising oil and gas. 'This is a party that wants to increase benefits at a time when the benefits bill is so high. 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A pleasure welcoming @KemiBadenoch to Scottish Tory conference. Together, we're fighting for a common-sense future for our country 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿#SCC25 — Russell Findlay MSP (@RussellFindlay1) June 13, 2025 'In April this year, Nigel Farage said he would be fine with the SNP winning another five years in power,' she said in her speech. 'He's fine with another five years of higher bills, longer waiting lists, declining school standards, gender madness, and ultimately, independence.' Addressing her first Scottish conference since taking on the top job, Ms Badenoch claimed: 'Reform will vote to let the SNP in, Conservatives will only ever vote to get the nationalists out.' Part of her 'positive vision of the future' includes 'standing up' for the North Sea oil and gas industry, with Mrs Badenoch claiming that by increasing the energy profits levy – also known as the windfall tax – the Tories had introduced, Labour is 'killing the oil and gas industry'. 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Blackpool teacher charged with sexual assault and murder of baby
Blackpool teacher charged with sexual assault and murder of baby

The Guardian

time15 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Blackpool teacher charged with sexual assault and murder of baby

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Cops unveil new £180k bullet-proof battle machine – 18 armoured 4x4s to tackle extreme riots unveiled by Met
Cops unveil new £180k bullet-proof battle machine – 18 armoured 4x4s to tackle extreme riots unveiled by Met

The Sun

time17 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Cops unveil new £180k bullet-proof battle machine – 18 armoured 4x4s to tackle extreme riots unveiled by Met

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A spokesperson said: 'These are specialist armoured vehicles used for high-risk armed policing operations, by officers deployed at airports and as a contingency option for use in the most serious public disorder the like of which we thankfully rarely see." Sandcats are manufactured by Israeli company Plasan and have been used by the military in several countries. According to the company website, the Sandcat Tigris is the preferred choice for both the IDF and Ministry of Defence. They replace the older Jankel models, which were deployed during the 2011 riots but have very rarely been used. Fourth night of violence as families forced to hide in attics in riots which injured 41 cops 8 8 The bullet-resistant Jankel Guardians that the force previously used cost about £100,000 each. The seven-tonne personnel carrier could withstand AK-47 bullets and had a bomb-proof floor. Over the past year or so, the UK has been rocked by disorder and rioting in the streets. 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Police quickly clamped down on hundreds of rioters who were spotted throwing missiles and petrol bombs in Portadown - less than an hour from where the riots started - last night. Shocking footage showed thugs lobbing live fireworks at rows of police riot vans. The chaos began in Ballymena on Monday night, hours after two 14-year-old boys appeared in court charged with attempted rape of a girl. The boys confirmed their names - which cannot be reported - and their ages through a Romanian interpreter at Coleraine Magistrates' Court. Cops decried the mass carnage which followed as "racist thuggery". Northern Ireland 's Chief Constable told how the girl's family had been left "mortified" by the horrific scenes. Speaking yesterday, he said: "I reiterate the retraumatising of this poor girl, she's been through enough through what happened to her on Saturday evening. She doesn't want any of this. "I know the family are mortified. 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