To say the PM and Home Secretary nor anyone else have 'NO POWER' (You 'shouting' - not me) over operational decisions is simply not credible.
Why do I say that?
As well as the Prime Minister, ten other Labour MPs said they also received free tickets to see Ms Swift, including
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson, Health Secretary Wes Streeting, and
London Mayor Sadiq Khan.
Why have I highlighted the Home Secretary and London Mayor, both of whom were recipients of free tickets?
At the centre of the issue is the claim that senior Labour figures, including Home Secretary Yvette Cooper and London Mayor Sadiq Khan, personally intervened to secure a high-security police escort,
despite the initial hesitance from the Met, and despite the initial resistance, the SEG eventually agreed.
The Attorney General (Who as far as I know didn't receive tickets) was also involved in discussions. Swift was granted blue-light police escorts to her London shows after the Government’s chief law office
r put pressure on Scotland Yard. Sources said that Attorney General Lord Hermer was asked to intervene after the Met Police warned that giving the billionaire pop star such protection would breach its protocols.
It was unclear who in Government had requested that its top lawyer get involved, according to reports last night. However, it was claimed that it was only after Lord Hermer wrote to the Met that senior officers reversed their original decision and granted a level of security normally reserved for royalty and top-level politicians.
Sir Keir, and his wife Victoria were granted a private audience with Taylor Swift on August 20 – the final night of Swift's tour – after he received £2,800 of tickets and hospitality from her record label Universal came just days after the PM's now-sacked chief of staff Sue Gray took part in negotiations with Ms Swift's mother and manager, Andrea, which led to Scotland Yard agreeing to provide a 'VVIP' escort,
which is even denied to the Duke of Sussex, (fifth in line to the throne), when visiting Britain.
The
Met Police Commissioner is accountable in law for exercising police powers and to the Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime and to the Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime
and
is held to account for the delivery of policing by the Home Secretary and the Mayor of London. Both have a role in appointing the Commissioner, with the decision taken by the Home Secretary following consultation with the Mayor.
The Home Secretary also has a specific role regarding the functions of the Met that go beyond policing London – for example, counter-terrorism policing and the national policing functions that the Met carries out. The Mayor of London was given a direct mandate for policing in London in 2011, as part of the Police and Social Responsibility Act. As such, the Mayor is responsible for setting the strategic direction of policing in London through the Police and Crime Plan.
https://www.met.police.uk/police-forces/metropolitan-police/areas/about-us/about-the-met/governance/
To say that the Home Secretary and Major of London 'have NO POWER' over operation decisions would have some credibility if they and the rest of the top team hadn't received many thousands of pounds worth of tickets to a sell-out tour, but yet again, through their lack of judgement and probity, they've seriously compromised the independence of their roles in the highest office of the land, and brought disrepute on themselves.
You may not think so, and more concerning, is that
they seem not to think so, but I do and I doubt that I'm alone in that view. It isn't about whether they're Labour Tory or whatever. It's about senior politicians not behaving in such a manner that calls into question their independence.
And please, for goodness sake, don't tell me 'they haven't broken any rules'.
This decision has been met with fierce criticism within the policing community, not only for its cost to the taxpayer but for setting what some consider a dangerous precedent.
“An Abuse of an Elite Service”:
Former Met commander John O’Connor has been particularly vocal about the decision, branding it “an abuse of an elite service”. He told the press: “The SEG is dedicated to the very serious business of protecting the Royal Family, senior government ministers and foreign heads of state. This interference creates a perception that there is no such thing as a free lunch or concert tickets.”
https://emergency-services.news/tay...ort-sparks-controversy-a-dangerous-precedent/
Exactly so.
Just a final point: This wasn't an armed escort - just a 'blue light escort' so was really just glitzy 'Showbiz' razzmatazz at Taxpayers' expense.