Thursday 11 August 2011


Home Secretary, Theresa May, introduced a debate on public disorder in the House of Commons on Thursday 11 August 2011.

Watch the debate live on Parliament TV or from the beginning of the debate. Shadow Home Secreatry, Yvette Cooper, responded to the debate on behalf of the Opposition.

Parliament TV live: Debate on public disorder
Parliament TV: Debate on public disorder








deputy leader Harriet Harman led a group of London Labour MPs to meet Home Office Minister James Brokenshire on the riots and the after manth























Photos by Ayoub mzee

David Cameron faces further pressure over police cuts
11 Aug 2011

David Cameron will come under renewed pressure today to reverse the Government's police cuts in the wake of riots sweeping the country.

The Prime Minister has already faced calls, including from London mayor Boris Johnson, to halt the coalition's cuts to police budgets.

And today the Guardian quoted ministerial sources demanding the Home Office rethink the plans after order was only restored to London's streets by putting 16,000 police officers on the frontline.

Mr Cameron will make an emergency statement to Parliament later after Speaker John Bercow recalled the Commons following widespread looting and violence.

MPs are likely to use the debate to press for cuts to be stopped in light of the riots in towns and cities across England.

Meanwhile, The Guardian quoted an anonymous minister saying: "It is manifestly the case that we need police numbers and effective deployment of officers that generates public confidence.

"There are inevitably pressures on spending. But you need to run the numbers through the system to make sure you do not leave an exposed flank."

Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper reacted angrily to the report, saying: "For 10 months we have told the Prime Minister and the Home Secretary their 20% frontloaded cuts to the police were unsustainable and were taking huge risks with law and order.

"They have repeatedly refused to reconsider the cuts and have refused to listen to warnings from the police and communities up and down the country.

"It is staggering and utterly shameful if it has taken these appalling events for ministers to start waking up to what everyone else has known all along: more police on the streets makes them safer and not only at times like this."

Earlier, Labour's deputy leader Harriet Harman led a group of London Labour MPs to meet Home Office Minister James Brokenshire who insisted no u-turn was on the cards.

Ms Harman said: "The Minister said there would be no rethink on the police cuts in London. That's totally unacceptable to people and business.

"They say they are going to go ahead with the cuts, irrespective of what's happening, but they will have to back down."

Home Secretary Theresa May yesterday defended the cuts, telling ITV News: "It's necessary that as a country, as a Government, we have a credible plan to deal with the (budget) deficit, which we do.

"That means we are seeing police budgets being cut as other budgets are being cut.

"We know money can be taken out of police forces without affecting them doing their job of protecting the public