- By Noah Vickers
- Local Democracy Reporting Service
Sadiq Khan has refused to rule out breaking up the Metropolitan Police if current efforts to reform it fail.
The Mayor of London warned “nothing is off the table” when it comes to improving the force’s culture.
Speaking to Times Radio, Mr Khan was asked whether there was the prospect of the Met Police being broken up if the culture did not improve.
He said: “I think… we need to try and see if this works. And if it doesn’t work nothing is off the table.”
‘Critical’
Referencing Sir Mark Rowley, the Met Police’s commissioner, he said: “Sir Mark himself has had the humility and candour to say he needs around two or three years to turn things around. I think he’s right, by the way. You don’t change a system or culture overnight.”
He said that he wanted a critical part of his mayoralty to be about the reform of the police service.
“It’s incredibly important,” he said. “The way we’ve always done stuff isn’t working. And that’s what the police board is seeking to address as well.”
“This outside expertise will be really important in ensuring we bring about the long-lasting cultural and systematic change in the police service that Londoners so desperately want and need,” he said.
The board’s members include author and educator Stuart Lawrence – the younger brother of murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence – and Neil Basu, the Met’s former assistant commissioner for specialist operations.