Home

Blair resignation: Aftershocks continue

Blair resignation: Aftershocks continueBlair resignation: Aftershocks continue

Friday, 03, Oct 2008 05:51

The aftershocks over Sir Ian Blair's resignation as Britain top police officer continued this morning, with London mayor Boris Johnson forced to deny reports of a Tory plot to oust him.

Speaking to reporters, Mr Johnson described allegations of a plot to oust Sir Ian as "completely barking".

"I came to this conclusion after a great deal of thought and after consulting a number of people," he said.

Home secretary Jacqui Smith criticised the mayor last night, saying Mr Johnson had acted improperly.

The Met chief announced his decision to step down from office on Thursday, saying Mr Johnson no longer supported him.

The London mayor took over as chairman of the Metropolitan police authority on Wednesday and informed Sir Ian during a meeting that he sought fresh leadership at the police force.

Ms Smith, though, has claimed that Mr Johnson did not follow official protocol of seeking the home secretary's approval.

Speaking on BBC's Question Time last night, she said: "There's a process in place that the mayor chose not to respect.

"The mayor said on the first day in his job he didn't feel he had confidence in Sir Ian and that's why he took the decision to resign.

"What is important when you are both choosing and when you're supporting somebody that you're asking to do a job like that is that you keep party politics out of it."

Former Labour mayor Ken Livingstone also criticised the decision, claiming he regretted the "political decision".

The Conservatives countered though, criticising Ms Smith for continuing to support Sir Ian after his decision to leave office.

Sir Ian's three-and-a-half year reign as Met commissioner was blighted by controversy.

He was roundly condemned after claiming he did not understand why the Soham murder victims, Holly Chapman and Jessica Wells, had received so much media attention.

He also received wide-spread criticism over his handling of the shooting of Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes at Stockwell tube station in July 2005.

Yesterday he announced he would officially leave the position on December 1st.


What do you think ?

Name 

Town/Country 

Your email 

Your comment 

Enter the text shown to the right

New jobs channel

The new look politics.co.uk now includes a jobs channel, where you can search for jobs and sign up for our jobs bulletin.

Newsletter

Sign up to politics.co.uk’s daily newsletter and you’ll never miss a key political story again

Opinion Formers

BSIA - The British Security Industry Association

The British Security Industry Association is the principal trade association for professional security companies in the UK. We represent over 550 security companies.

Public Affairs Jobs

Check out politics.co.uk's new jobs section, for government, public sector and public affairs roles.

politics.co.uk brings you a new monthly roundup of public affairs, government and local government appointments.

Current Vacancies:

Related News

First MPA meeting with Johnson in chair

Boris Johnson fulfils one of his key manifesto commitments today as he chairs the Metropolitan Police Authority (MPA) for the first time.

Boris Johnson chairs MPA for first time

Related Analysis

Analysis: Boris' challenge

Boris Johnson's decision to push Sir Ian Blair out of his job sets up the possibility of a real clash between City Hall and the Home Office.

Boris Johnson puts the ball in Jacqui Smith's court

Latest Headlines

Concern over adult retraining courses

Those who have lost their jobs because of the recession and looking to reskill are facing a decline in the number of available courses because of the government's policies, it has been claimed.

Adult learning faces funding shortfall

Legislation

Counterterrorism bill

The bill is part of wide reaching measures to improve the detection and policing of terrorism. It will bring in post-charge questioning and could introduce the use of intercept evidence. It backs increasing the period for detention without trial to 56 days.

Immigration detention centres

What are immigration detention centres? Immigration detention centres are holding centres for foreign nationals waiting decisions on their asylum claims or waiting deportation following a failed application.