Advertisement
Advertisement
Britain
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Police officers remove floral tributes that have been laid in Parliament Square, in London. Photo: Reuters

Politico | UK MPs could be given police protection for public meetings in wake of David Amess killing

  • Urgent review into security of MPs away from parliament
  • UK lawmaker David Amess was stabbed to death on Friday
Britain

This story is published in a content partnership with POLITICO. It was originally reported by Annabelle Dickson on politico.eu on October 17, 2021.

British MPs holding meetings with the public could be offered police protection following the killing of their colleague David Amess, Home Secretary Priti Patel said.

Ministers and parliamentary authorities were carrying out an urgent review of MPs’ security outside parliament after the Conservative representative for Southend West was fatally stabbed at a drop-in meeting in his constituency.

These face-to-face meetings, allowing constituents to bring problems to their lawmakers directly, are known as surgeries.

Patel on Sunday said a range of security measures had been put in place since Friday’s attack, but made clear other options were being considered, including whether MPs will be offered “officers or some kind of protection while you’re holding your surgery”.

Veteran Conservative MP David Amess was talking with voters at a church in the small town of Leigh-on-Sea, east of London, when he was killed on Friday. Photo: AFP

“We need to close any gaps basically, where we feel that there are concerns,” she told Sky News. Patel said new protective measures would be “immediate”.

“This isn’t a case of let’s wait for two weeks, three weeks, four weeks,” she said.

MPs were offered tighter security measures following the 2016 murder of Labour representative Jo Cox, who was killed on her way to meet constituents in her Batley and Spen seat.

But, writing in The Observer on Sunday, Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle said Britain now needed “to take stock and review whether those measures are adequate to safeguard members, staff and constituents, especially during surgeries”.

Father of suspect who killed British lawmaker says he’s ‘traumatised’

Hoyle warned, however, that ending face-to-face surgeries completely could undermine a “cornerstone of our democracy” by reducing the visibility of parliamentarians to the public.

Labour’s Shadow Foreign Secretary Lisa Nandy said the suggestion of “ensuring that anyone who wants or needs security at surgeries is a good idea, not least because people often know, even if we don’t advertise them, that they are happening, so they can become a magnet for people who want to come and cause trouble”.

“I’m not sure that we can ever eliminate the risk, but there are other things that can be done to reduce the risk,” the opposition frontbencher said.

Police arrested 25-year-old Ali Harbi Ali after the attack. He was being held at a London police station under the Terrorism Act.

Read Politico’s story.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: MPs could get police protection for public meetings
Post