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POLICE AND CRIME COMMISSIONER (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   122169


Electing police and crime commissions: the challenges and opportunities of the new role / Gilmore, Margaret   Journal Article
Gilmore, Margaret Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract In mid-November 2012, elections will be held in each police force area in England and Wales, apart from London, for the post of police and crime commissioner. Senior police officers suggest it will be the biggest shake-up since the first police force was established by Sir Robert Peel in the early nineteenth century. The government believes the new PCCs will empower local communities to decide policing priorities in their areas; critics fear the move is politicising policing and may prove detrimental to national policing needs. Margaret Gilmore investigates the challenges and the likely impact of this new approach
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2
ID:   140857


PCC elections as a ‘failed experiment’: what lessons can be learned? / Kirkland, Christopher   Article
Kirkland, Christopher Article
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Summary/Abstract The low turnout of the 2012 police and crime commissioner (PCC) elections have led to questions surrounding their legitimacy and have even led to the former Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg describing the elections—elections his party helped to introduce—as a ‘failed experiment’. Despite this, the election of a majority Conservative government in May 2015 appears to offer some longevity to the role of police and crime commissioners and cements next year's PCC elections in the political diary. Concerns in the immediate aftermath of the elections focused upon the costs of the elections. In this article I offer some suggestions as to what lessons could be learned from this experiment and, through exploring the attitudes of voters, political parties and the media, suggest that we can learn four lessons: (1) that spoilt ballots cannot be ignored; that (2) political parties and (3) the media's attitudes toward elections are important in encouraging people to vote; and (4) that high numbers of independent candidates cannot simply be welcomed at times of elections.
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