90 days from today is Sat, 22 March 2025

West Mercia Police Federation

Federation: ‘We have no confidence in the Home Secretary’

22 July 2021

The Police Federation has declared it no longer has confidence in Home Secretary Priti Patel after branding a bitterly opposed pay freeze for officers as “the final straw”.

Federation officials overwhelmingly backed the vote of no confidence in Ms Patel after announcing plans to withdraw support and engagement from the Police Remuneration Review Body (PRRB) following an extraordinary meeting of its National Council this morning.

Sarah Cooper, chair of West Mercia Police Federation, has backed the Federation’s stance.

She said: "I am disgusted, but not surprised, at yet more contempt directed at the police by the Government. I have asked myself many times in recent months why anyone would want to be a police officer in the current climate. But they do, because they care and they want to serve the public. Everyday our officers put themselves at risk to keep others safe. They have been in the frontline of the Covid crisis along with other public sector workers, yet we are treated less favourably. It’s tragic and dangerous that the Government has no appreciation for the invaluable work our members do on a daily basis.

“Now with this pay freeze, it is time for the Federation to make it clear that officers have had enough of being treated with contempt. We cannot stand by and allow this to continue.”

National chair John Apter said: “The PRRB is not truly independent, the body which is the only mechanism we have to consider any pay award for police officers, has its hands constantly tied by the Government which continually interferes. The PRRB itself recognises its lack of independence. 

“We can no longer accept this and have no confidence in this system which is why we are walking away.

“We often hear the Home Secretary praise police officers but our members are so angry with this Government. They have been on the frontline of this pandemic for 18 months and will now see other public services given pay increases while they receive nothing.

“At the beginning of this pandemic they endured PPE shortages and were not even prioritised for the vaccination. They continue to be politicised and this pay announcement is the final straw. 

“As the organisation that represents more than 130,000 police officers I can say quite categorically – we have no confidence in the current Home Secretary. I cannot look my colleagues in the eye and do nothing.”

In a statement issued after an extraordinary National Council meeting, the Police Federation said: “For too long PFEW has also been forced to enter into an unfair pay process with the odds weighted firmly in the favour of the Government.

“The PRRB’s lack of independence is something the body recognises itself and even highlights in its report.

“With inflation set to increase to almost four per cent later this year, this is yet another real-terms pay cut for police officers in England and Wales and a huge slap in the face for our members who have been attacked and vilified while holding the frontline during this pandemic.

“PFEW has tried its level best to be entirely co-operative in all dealings with the Government. But this Government and this Home Secretary, for all their talk of how much they value what we do, have made this impossible. They cannot be trusted or taken at face value in the way we would expect.

“As the undisputed voice of policing we say this to the Home Secretary: you cannot pat our members on the back for their heroic efforts with one hand, while effectively taking their pay with the other. Warm words are no longer enough.”