The home secretary has oversight of
law enforcement in
England and Wales, and UK-wide elements of law enforcement. Law enforcement within Scotland and Northern Ireland is largely
devolved.
Policing The
Police Act 1996 provides any
secretary of state, in practice the home secretary, with powers including: • The power to direct a police force they are satisfied is failing, or will fail, to discharge any of its functions in an effective manner, to take specified measures. • The power to require a chief officer of police of any police force to provide them with information on such matters as they specify, and require a chief officer to publish this information. • The power to approve (or not) codes of practice issued by the
College of Policing. • The power to alter
police areas by order. The
Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 amended the
Police Act 1996, so it requires any secretary of state, in practice the home secretary, to issue a document called the Strategic Policing Requirement, and update it from time to time, that sets out the current national threats and the national policing capabilities needed to counter them.
Police and crime commissioners and
chief constables must have regard to this when carrying out their functions. Annual General Meeting. The home secretary also influences the way policing is conducted by, for example, meeting with police leaders to establish priorities and hold them to account, publicly calling on the police to enforce particular laws, and setting standards and expectations by writing letters and making speeches to police leaders or police officers. The home secretary is the sole shareholder and owner of the
College of Policing Limited, a
company limited by guarantee. The home secretary appoints its chair and its
chief executive officer. The
Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 provides the home secretary with a power of veto regarding any regulations the college requests to make, and a power to direct the college to exercise any of its functions. The
Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 requires any secretary of state, in practice the home secretary, to lay before Parliament each financial year a Police Covenant annual report. The home secretary has no power to direct individual police operations, as police forces have operational independence from the government. However, what constitutes legitimate oversight and what constitutes interference in operational decision-making can be disputed.
Early release of prisoners on compassionate grounds The
Crime (Sentences) Act 1997 provides any secretary of state with the power to release a
life prisoner on
compassionate grounds, and the
Criminal Justice Act 2003 provides the same power for fixed-term prisoners. Previously, these powers were exercised by the home secretary. However, they are now exercised by the
justice secretary.
Legislation The home secretary initiates and guides legislation through Parliament that creates and abolishes offences, and sets or changes their punishment, thereby shaping society. For example, Home Secretary
Roy Jenkins oversaw measures such as the effective abolition in Britain of both
capital punishment and
theatre censorship, the partial
decriminalisation of homosexuality, relaxing of
divorce law, suspension of
birching and the liberalisation of
abortion law.
Simon Heffer wrote that, '
Bogdanor correctly identifies the massive social changes Roy Jenkins accomplished as Home Secretary, which largely invented the society in which, for better or worse, we live today.' The home secretary also guides legislation through Parliament that changes policing structures. For example, the
Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 transferred the control of police forces from police authorities to elected
Police and Crime Commissioners.
Appointments Senior policing roles Under the
Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011, the
Metropolitan Police Commissioner, regarded as the highest rank in British policing, and
Deputy Commissioner are formally appointed by the king on the recommendation of any secretary of state, in practice the home secretary. The Commissioner and Deputy Commissioner then hold office
at His Majesty's pleasure. The
Crime and Courts Act 2013 requires any secretary of state, in practice the home secretary, to select and appoint the
Director-General of the National Crime Agency, and determine the terms and conditions of their appointment. The home secretary determines the strategic priorities for the National Crime Agency, but the Director-General has the power to decide which operations to mount, and how they will be conducted. The home secretary may call upon the Director General to resign or retire, who must then do so.
Oversight of policing Under the
Police Act 1996, inspectors in
His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary, and the
Chief Inspector of Constabulary, are appointed by the king on the advice of any secretary of state, in practice the home secretary. The annual inspection programme is subject to the approval of the home secretary, who may also require further inspections of police forces, beyond the terms of the annual inspection programme, to be conducted. in practice the home secretary, may, by regulations, designate an organisation as able to make a
super-complaint to
Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Constabulary that a feature of policing in England and Wales by one or more police forces is significantly harming the interests of the public. The secretary of state does this after applying criteria specified in regulations made by the secretary of state. Under a 2017 amendment to the
Police Reform Act 2002, the Director General of the
Independent Office for Police Conduct is appointed by the king on the advice of the home secretary. The act also requires any secretary of state, in practice the home secretary,
Commissioners Under the
Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act 2004, the
justice secretary must consult the home secretary before appointing a
Commissioner for Victims and Witnesses. The
Modern Slavery Act 2015 requires any secretary of state, in practice the home secretary, to appoint an
Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner.
Other appointments The
Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014, which established the
Police Remuneration Review Body, provides for any secretary of state, in practice the home secretary, to appoint five or more members of this Body, including the deputy chair. Under the
Protection of Freedoms Act 2012, any secretary of state, in practice the home secretary, appoints the chair and board members of the
Disclosure and Barring Service. ==National security==