Skip to main content
Police and Crime Commissioners’ roles to be abolished with powers going to regional mayors or local council boards

POLICE and Crime Commissioners’ roles will be abolished at the end of their terms in 2028,  the government announced today. Their powers will be transferred to regional mayors or policing and crime boards of local council leaders.

Policing minister Sarah Jones told the Commons that the model, which was introduced in November 2012, has “failed to live up to expectations” by failing to increase accountability or build a greater connection between policing and local communities.

“The reality is that the PCC model has weakened local police accountability and has had perverse impacts on the recruitment of chief constables,” she said.

“They have failed to inspire confidence in local people, in stark contrast to the mayoral model, which has clearly been ultimately more successful.”

Abolishing the roles will save £100 million this parliament, she added, insisting boards will “not be a return to the bureaucratic and invisible committee-based oversight” of the past.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
SLAUGHTER OF THE INNOCENT: At Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis Baraa Heikal mourns over the body of his brother Fadi Heikal, killed in an Israeli strike, May 10 2026
Policing / 14 May 2026
14 May 2026

The Met Police's refusal to act against British nationals accused of war crimes in Gaza is a green light for Israel's genocide, writes CLAUDIA WEBBE

A camera on top of a Live Facial Recognition (LFR) van during a demonstration of facial recognition technology by Surrey and Sussex Police at Surrey Police headquarters in Guildford, November 11, 2025
Policing / 13 November 2025
13 November 2025
Jeremy Corbyn (second left) and Zarah Sultana, MP for Coventry South (second right) on the picket line outside London Euston train station, August 18, 2022
Features / 17 September 2025
17 September 2025

LOTTE COLLETT welcomes the arrival of a new party for the left, a vehicle for councils to finally fight for progressive policies on housing, green spaces and public facilities, rather than administering cuts and misery from central government 

ABUSE IGNORED: Children walk through Rotherham, one of the many northern towns ripped apart by decades of systematic grooming
Features / 20 June 2025
20 June 2025

To quell the public anger and silence the far right, Labour has rushed out a report so that it can launch a National Inquiry — ANN CZERNIK examines Baroness Casey’s incendiary audit and finds fatal flaws that fail to 'draw a line' under the scandal as hoped