- Lib Dems call on Labour Government to rule out real-terms policing budget cuts as unsolved vehicle theft epidemic continues
- Water company bonuses: Half baked announcement won’t reform industry
- Government listens to Liberal Democrat calls to end “corridor care” but cannot lead patients “up the garden path”
Lib Dems call on Labour Government to rule out real-terms policing budget cuts as unsolved vehicle theft epidemic continues
- Shock new data crunched by the Liberal Democrats reveals that last year, more than 75% of vehicle thefts went unsolved while just 2% of cases resulted in a suspect being charged or summonsed.
- 13 police forces in England and Wales had at least 75% of all vehicle theft cases unsolved in 2024.
- This follows speculation that police funding will face real-terms cuts in next week’s Spending Review, which has been condemned by police chiefs across the country.
- The Liberal Democrats are calling on the Government to keep their promises on neighbourhood policing by ruling out real-terms cuts to policing budgets ahead of the Spending Review.
House of Commons library analysis of official Home Office data on crime outcomes, commissioned by the Liberal Democrats, shows a vehicle theft epidemic with the offence becoming ‘effectively decriminalised’. Almost 95,000 cases went unsolved last year.
The City of London force came out worst, with none of its 30 cases last year ending with a suspect being charged. The Metropolitan police followed suit, with only 0.85% of all vehicle theft cases ending with a charge.
Leicestershire police force had a similarly worrying performance last year, with only 1.0% of all cases of vehicle theft ending with a charge. South Yorkshire reported that only 1.2% of cases were charged.
Derbyshire, Gwent and West Yorkshire also all reported that their cases in total had less than a 1.5% of cases ending with a charge.
These shocking figures come after several police chiefs have warned the Labour government that they will not be able to deliver their promises on bolstering neighbourhood policing or halving knife crime and violence against women and girls without proper investment.
The Liberal Democrats are urging the Government to rule out any cuts to policing budgets, following speculation that the Home Office will face real-terms cuts at the upcoming Spending Review.
Commenting, Liberal Democrat Leader Ed Davey said:
Vehicle crime has now been effectively decriminalised, with tens of thousands of victims being denied the justice they deserve as criminals get away scot free.
Our communities deserve so much better than this – so it beggars belief that the Government is now toying with the idea of cutting police funding. It’s not just reckless, it’s dangerous.
If this Government is serious about keeping their promises on neighbourhood policing, they must not make the same mistakes as the last Conservative one. That means finally giving police forces the resources they need to get tough on crime – and urgently ruling out any real-terms cuts to policing budgets.
Water company bonuses: Half baked announcement won’t reform industry
Commenting on the Govt’s announcement that six water companies are banned from giving executives bonuses, Liberal Democrat Environment Spokesperson Tim Farron MP said:
This half baked announcement doesn’t touch the sides in enacting fundamental reform – especially if water companies can still workaround bonuses and wriggle off the hook.
When customers are footing the bill for the mismanagement of water companies and the environment is paying the price, bans to bonuses must be properly enforced and not in effect act as a pause to profits from pollution.
The Liberal Democrats have led the campaign against sewage, with our plans for a new regulator and a robust ban on bonuses until leaks are fixed and sewage spills are stopped.
Government listens to Liberal Democrat calls to end “corridor care” but cannot lead patients “up the garden path”
Responding to the Government setting out its Urgent and Emergency Care Plan which aims to eliminate “corridor care” following recent Liberal Democrat calls to “end corridor care”, Liberal Democrat Health and Social Care spokesperson Helen Morgan MP said:
Patients have heard these kinds of promises before only to be led up the garden path. We can’t bear any more of the shameful neglect and failed delivery that we saw for a decade under the Conservatives.
It’s good to see Ministers finally listen to Liberal Democrat demands to end corridor care but the misery in our A&Es will only be prolonged if they continue to move at a snail’s pace on social care.
Until they grasp this nettle, millions are at risk of dangerously long-waits in A&E. They must see sense and conclude their review into social care by the end of this year.



One Comment
Might the common cause of all these woeful and avoidable problems be thé all party addiction to Austerity/Neoliberalism which seeks to impoverish the not-wealthy for the benefit of the increasingly wealthy and to nave “small government”?
P.S. Might “small government” be a form of “deceptive speak” to obscure the real reason for seeing small government which is to obtain weak government in order that the not-wealthy/influential/powerful may be even more vulnerable to Austerity/Neoliberal exploitation?