Major Shake-Up Looms: UK Police Chiefs Call for Drastic Merger of Forces

England and Wales's policing structure, comprising 43 separate forces established under the Police Act 1964, is currently under mounting pressure for a radical overhaul. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood is urged to consider a proposal backed by two of Britain's most senior police officers, Sir Mark Rowley, Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, and Gavin Stephens, Chair of the National Police Chiefs' Council, to reduce the number of forces to between 10 and 15. This would represent the biggest shake-up of policing in half a century, addressing an outdated model that critics argue is no longer fit for purpose in the modern era.
Sir Mark Rowley and Gavin Stephens have articulated a compelling case for reform, asserting that the current 43 forces, coupled with regional collaborations and a complex array of national units, foster significant inefficiency and duplication of effort. They highlight that the policing model, designed for the 1960s, is stretched beyond its capacity to support contemporary challenges, which have evolved dramatically with changes in crime, technology, and communities. The fragmented structure quietly drains capacity from the frontline, preventing the public from receiving the visible and effective service they rightly expect.
The core argument for consolidation rests on the ability to create larger, more capable forces that can sustain vital specialist functions more effectively. These include crucial areas such as murder investigations, firearms operations, and the fight against serious and organised crime. Rationalising support services and specialist functions across fewer, larger entities is projected to eliminate duplication, thereby releasing capacity equivalent to thousands of officers and staff. This streamlining would also provide a robust platform for the exploitation of modern technology, including artificial intelligence.
Modern threats, such as organised crime, terrorism, systemic problems like violence against women and girls, child abuse, and online fraud, demand a strong national and international response that the current localised structures struggle to provide. Cybercriminals and fraudsters alone are responsible for over half of all reported offences. A more integrated national structure, aligned with international and intelligence partners and supported by secure technology platforms and expert investigative units, is deemed essential to match the pace of evolving threats and prevent systemic failure.
The proposed changes mirror a successful reform in Scotland more than a decade ago, which saw eight former forces merged into a single 'Police Scotland' in April 2013. Proponents believe that integrating forces would produce a more joined-up approach to tackling crime. While critics express concerns that such a large-scale merger could weaken local policing, advocates emphasize that a strong national centre, supported by fewer, fully capable regional forces, would still allow local policing to be rooted in empowered Basic Command Units. These units would remain focused on community needs but could instantly draw on regional or national assets and specialist support, ensuring officers are backed, not burdened, by the system.
Technological advancement is a key component of the proposed reform. Currently, the fragmented nature of 43 forces hampers the efficient rollout of new tools, such as live facial recognition technology using AI, as each force must individually test software. A consolidated system would allow successful technologies to be deployed universally, freeing officers from hours spent on administrative tasks. The vision includes modern digital tools, real-time data, better mapping, and improved systems to give local teams more time within their communities, supported by a workforce blending cyber specialists, forensic experts, neighbourhood officers, and analysts.
While the renewed pressure for this reform comes ahead of the Government's expected Policing Reform White Paper, anticipated by the end of this month, Home Office sources have indicated that this specific radical change might not be included in the forthcoming document. Despite this, police chiefs insist that many aspects of reform, such as reducing duplication, standardising best practice, pooling specialist units, and co-investing in technology, can begin immediately without waiting for legislation.
Beyond the structural changes within policing, there is also a critical need for the wider criminal justice system to keep pace. Delays, bureaucracy, and a lack of efficiency undermine victims' confidence and waste countless officer hours. Examples like court cases listed for years in advance and repeat offenders repeatedly bailed highlight the urgency for a quicker, less bureaucratic system that empowers police to charge more offences directly, thereby protecting communities more effectively.
In essence, the aims of this comprehensive reform are simple: to achieve resilient local policing that makes people feel safer, to establish a national force better equipped to meet a full range of complex threats, to reduce waste, to create a service empowered by modern technology, and to support a workforce prepared for today’s challenges. Sixty years after the last major changes, the call to act swiftly is clear, to avoid a slow but certain systemic failure.
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