Met Police Officer: Suella Braverman Was Right About Biased, Woke Policing

In the Mail, a Metropolitan Police officer voices concerns over double standards in policing, citing a ‘light touch’ approach to pro-Palestinian protests, contrasting with tougher responses elsewhere, and attributing this disparity to a politically correct cultural shift. Here’s how the article begins:

Suella Braverman was right to accuse police chiefs of “double standards” in how they tackle different protests. And I should know – because for the past decade I have served as an officer on the Met’s frontline.

What I have witnessed in recent weeks, as tens of thousands of pro-Palestinian protesters have repeatedly marched through London, has left me in despair about the future of a force to which I have dedicated my professional life.

We have seen appalling antisemitism, with mobs calling for ‘jihad’ against Israel. My colleagues have been ordered to police these intimidating displays of disorder with the lightest of touches.

It was the same with Black Lives Matter protests and, for a long time, the hugely disruptive stunts by groups such as Just Stop Oil.

In contrast, anti-lockdown demonstrations during the pandemic were robustly dealt with by officers in full riot gear.

It is obvious to me – and to many of my fellow officers – that there is a clear bias.

This ‘playing favourites’ is a symptom of years of ‘wokery’ and political correctness that have completely transformed the culture of the Met – and which mean the force cannot cope any longer with disputes that involve inter-ethnic conflict. Put simply, senior officers are terrified of being accused of racism if they fully enforce the law against pro-Palestinian protesters.

When there is a group of extremists within a large crowd chanting something that is clearly a hate crime – such as calling for Jews to be killed – you might expect police to force their way through and make arrests.

But in the minds of senior officers, this could spiral into a major physical confrontation, which is not an image they are comfortable with. Indeed, the idea that it is the police’s job to physically confront criminals is completely lost on many of those who lead the Met.

So instead, officers are encouraged to film the protesters and try to make arrests later. The problem with this kid gloves approach – along with the obvious point that sometimes the offenders are not found – is that it causes huge damage to public confidence. Many ordinary people will conclude the police are just not on their side.

And then there is the double standard. Anti-lockdown protests were policed much more forcefully because police chiefs knew those protesters had no serious political support. As a result, there would be few complaints and MPs would not pile in and attempt to hound them out of their jobs.

Worth reading in full.

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Monro
2 years ago

Active patrolling on foot is one of the first principles of a defensive position.

And so it is for policing; no difference.

And the reason that it is one of the first principles is: mindset; dominate ground.

If the Police sit back and observe, not only does it encourage potential offenders but it affects the mindset and morale of the Police.

I don’t see anything like enough active patrolling going on, too much motoring and, consequently, too many fat, unfit, Police Officers; too little, if any, deterrence.

Dinger64
2 years ago
Reply to  Monro

The picture at the top says it all! Respect? My arse!

john1T
2 years ago
Reply to  Dinger64

Try painting a George Cross on a policeman’s face. Not going to happen.

JayBee
2 years ago

Spare me such and Braverman’s dishonest drivel.
Not a single officer, journo or politician spoke up at the time, when it mattered To the contrary.
They all egged the police on to come down hard on lockdown protesters and to lie about the true number of participants.
Sc*m. All of them.

huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

There is another point not mentioned in the outtake above – the vicious police tactics employed against lockdown protesters was done in the certain knowledge that there would be little fight back because the protesters were genuinely law-abiding citizens protesting about removal of their rights.

Sorting out jihadi ranting maniacs in the expectation that the police might face fightback and get a good kicking would not be a good show.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
2 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Agent Provocateurs!

RTSC
RTSC
2 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Well said.

The MET were terrified of taking on a terrorist-supporting/sympathising mob far, far worse than the coal miners in the ’80s. Appeasement is the name of the game.

NickR
2 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

I attended the 1st and several later lockdown marches. They were heavily policed but the only trouble I saw at any of them was when the march got back to Hyde Park & a group of about 10 lads indulged in some shoving with a few police.
At the time it was suspected they were 5th columnists, the group appeared from no where, had the shoving match for about 10 mins then left. But, of course it dominated the what few news reports there were. It was very unrepresentative.
Having experienced that I disbelieve any reports about what happened over the weekend.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
2 years ago
Reply to  NickR

And they wonder why people are so hostile to BBC journalists, like the one who approached GB Resistance thinking they were GB News. He ran for the hills!

Matt Dalby
Matt Dalby
2 years ago
Reply to  NickR

The fact that at least 2 news sites referred to people on the counter demo as football hooligans says everything you need to know about the class bias of the MSM and the chances of balanced unbiased reporting. It’s exactly the same attitude that led to members of the establishment saying football fans needed to be educated by players taking the knee.

Roy Everett
2 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

Priti Patel was not much better, and she was Home Secretary at the time.
“We’ve seen our police officers yet again do incredible work to ensure that they help to stop the spread of this awful virus.
“The people that are protesting today have been protesting for many months, and we’ve seen this over successive weekends.”
She added: “We ask everybody to be conscientious – we all know the regulations and the guidance, we have brought these measures in to save lives and to prevent preventable deaths.” [BBC, 28th Nov 2020]
For the moment, I tend towards believing that Suella Braverman is realistic, or expressing a justifiable attitude, at least on the issue of the policing of marches. However, under the convention of cabinet collective responsibility she may be dismissed for telling the truth. This situation will be familiar to those academics and medics who spoke out against Lockdown and all its trappings.

Grim Ace
Grim Ace
2 years ago
Reply to  Roy Everett

Patel is useless. She said to the the Telegraph in an interview that Immigration was needed. She would, wouldn’t she

pamela preedy
pamela preedy
2 years ago
Reply to  Grim Ace

Ever seen a photograph of a large bunch of Home Office employees? The white British faces among them could be counted on half of an amputated hand.

Smudger
2 years ago
Reply to  Roy Everett

Or, is Braverman seeking to position herself for the top job when Sunak is bounced out after the next election? She didn’t get to the cabinet table by being truthful, honest and principled. It is all a game of personal ambition, money, power and greed, How any sane person can vote for any establishment party is truly beyond me.

jsampson45
jsampson45
2 years ago
Reply to  Smudger

To keep the worse one out. Simple enough.

Smudger
2 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

Spot on!

186NO
186NO
2 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

I don’t think Mrs Braverman was “in post” at that time? Did not lockdowns end in 2021?

Mogwai
2 years ago

”This ‘playing favourites’ is a symptom of years of ‘wokery’ and political correctness that have completely transformed the culture of the Met – and which mean the force cannot cope any longer with disputes that involve inter-ethnic conflict. Put simply, senior officers are terrified of being accused of racism if they fully enforce the law against pro-Palestinian protesters.”

But it’s not just the Met, clearly. For instance the many years that the ‘grooming gangs’ in towns across England were able to get away with their crimes against disadvantaged and vulnerable white girls. Many of these offences were brought to the attention of the police and authorities but people looked the other way, presumably for fear of being labelled ‘racist’ or ‘Islamophobic’.

Grim Ace
Grim Ace
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Islam enablers. Enemies of our people

Matt Dalby
Matt Dalby
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Part of the lack of action with regards to grooming gangs was class based. The police, quite possibly led by university educated middle class officers looked down on the working class girls and regarded them as white trash who weren’t being groomed because they were “asking for it”.

varmint
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Yes great comment——-You could also add all the Domestic abuse groups that dare not challenge the mutilation of young girls and of the wife beating that is allowed under Sharia Law

MikeAustin
2 years ago

To Mr ‘Met Police Officer’

When are you going to re-open crime reference number 6029628/21? This was opened by the Metropolitan Police in December 2021.It was to investigate the mass UK deaths caused by our government and others with the Covid-19 vaccines. This criminal action was advanced by numerous doctors, scientists and lawyers.

An enormous bundle of irrefutable evidence was presented to the police. The investigation was opened… and then quickly stopped for some unknown reason.

Do the job that the people of this country pay you to do!

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
2 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

It has gone very quiet, just like the Georgia Guide Stones.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
2 years ago

Only Christopher Chope complained when Police were arresting a 90yo….Absolute f*** disgraceful. As N Dixon pointed pointed out in the podcast, The Left can cause trouble and the ‘far right’ would take the blame.

huxleypiggles
2 years ago

https://thenewconservative.co.uk/downing-street-surrenders-to-islam/

Frank Haviland with his ‘report’ from earlier this week and he absolutely nails it. Plod is properly put in place as are the islamists.

“If the authorities truly intend to treat Islam with kid gloves in perpetuity, they might as well roll out Sharia law nationwide, and admit that non-Muslims are second-class citizens.  

The biggest threat to national security in Britain isn’t ‘white supremacy’, it’s the carte blanche afforded Islam – and judging by this latest show of strength outside Downing St, the authorities aren’t even pretending to be even-handed any more.”

MikeAustin
2 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

I just have to point out the tautological nature of the title: “surrenders to islam” because the word “islam” means surrender!

MikeAustin
2 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

I think we need to get wise here – wise to the psyops out there. It is always advisable to watch the tendency of one’s mind after reading articles from such sources. Then ask oneself, “Is that the way they are trying to guide me?” What we see – quite prevalently over the last few years – is an emphasis on smaller communities at the apparent expense of larger communities. We see it with politics, religion, sexuality, etc. If ‘our’ larger community gets persecuted while ‘their’ smaller community gets favoured, there could be a reaction against ‘their’ community. “Qui bono?” Who benefits? It is those who encourage this sort of division – the power seekers – that should be challenged. They benefit to the detriment of the communities that they have set against each other. And by supporting the weaker of the two, a longer-lasting conflict will ensue. The problem here, therefore, is not the ‘carte blanche‘ per se. It is the instilling of the notion of a carte blanche. Whether there is or is not an actual carte blanche is irrelevant. The interests of those in power is served by the thought that there is. Those thoughts, if followed… Read more »

Grim Ace
Grim Ace
2 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

It’s a whole lot simpler than that. Government and the state are scared of Islam because it actually uses violence to get its way and intimidate us. Government gave in to the IRA in the end. That was caused by their violence. Polticians are mostly cowardly people who don’t like being threatened with physical danger.
There is a simple lesson to draw from this

Grim Ace
Grim Ace
2 years ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

A civil war will come to this country. Been nearly 400 years. Probably overdue

Matt Dalby
Matt Dalby
2 years ago
Reply to  Grim Ace

In the words of Sam Harris, “The West either wins the argument or it wins the war, anything else will be bondage.”
I’m sure the vast majority of people will be with me in saying it would be much better to win the argument and convince Muslims that a lot of the morals/ethical principles they get from the Koran are inferior to “Western” values and need to be abandoned. Obviously, given what Muslims believe about the Koran, this may well not be possible. Therefore we’re left with 2 choices, slavery or winning a war.

“The End of Faith” by Sam Harris is one of my top 10 books of all time. It was written a few years after the 9/11 attacks, but the scenes on the streets of London of the last month, not to mention the 7 October massacre shows it’s just as relevant and important today as it ever was.

Ron Smith
Ron Smith
2 years ago
Reply to  Matt Dalby

Worth noting is the plight of Ayaan Hirsi Ali who escaped arranged marriage and renounced Islam, yet, found Europe to be no safe haven from Islam with free speech under attack.

thechap
thechap
2 years ago

I spent the last half of my 30-year police career looking forward *every day* to being out of it. I witnessed systemic corrupt ways of working imposed by senior officers, and too many rank and file prepared to go along with it. Not all, I would hasten to add…

Policing is a political football and the rot set in when Labour came to power in 1997 and introduce target culture. We ended up policing to hit targets rather than policing people. In one force I worked in, officers were given arrest targets and, of course, lots of people got lifted solely because the officer needed the figures, not because it was for the best outcome. It stank, and I said as much, thereby ensuring my career went no further.

I hated it and I couldn’t wait to leave. Anyone looking for advice about joining the police probably shouldn’t come to me for it…

MikeAustin
2 years ago
Reply to  thechap

I wouldn’t be surpised if there are those in other professions such as medicine, education, science, law etc who feel bound to comply with compromised bosses and their unethical commands.
As you have found, it leads to unhappiness. Not only does one’s compliance cause harm to others, it is corrosive to one’s own self-respect and dignity.
It takes guts to be the first to hold firm – but eventually that is the only way. One cannot comply one’s way out of tyranny.

Grim Ace
Grim Ace
2 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

I worked for the UK coast guard. Another government agency underperforming and being filled with staff who meet woke requirements rather than competency. The service is inefficient and sometimes dangerous (in that many staff cannot do what they are supposed to be able to do). And you would think that people should have maritime knowledge and experience or have been trained about the sea and boats and maritime skills and knowledge, in some depth? No. It is also led by many people who have no maritime experience or background. There is also a culture of cover up when things are found to be wrong. And leaders pretending it will be all right, or developing ridiculously over bureaucratic solutions. There are also too many women in senior posts meaning that emotions and feelings get woven into policy (men get passed over of course) Always dangerous for an action centred, public safety organisation. The director is a woman from a HR background. As a leader you need the relevant knowledge and experience so you know what bullshit smells like.

186NO
186NO
2 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

“I do not comply”…..cut me open and read what it says. (Won’t happen any time soon as the waiting list is very long atm, and lengthening )

RTSC
RTSC
2 years ago
Reply to  thechap

My late father was a MET policeman, serving 30 years from the 50’s to the ’80s.

He would be disgusted, but not surprised, by what has happened to the police “force” he served in. He could see it coming in the ’80s.

186NO
186NO
2 years ago
Reply to  RTSC

Would he have allowed face paint and genuflecting infect his working day…?

Brett_McS
2 years ago

Lots of laws, but selectively enforced according to the whims of the state. The term is Anarcho-Tyranny.

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
2 years ago
Reply to  Brett_McS

Not just selectively enforced, but so deliberately badly drafted you’ve no idea whether or not you’re breaking them.

And even if you ultimately avoid conviction after prosecution the process itself constitutes lengthy and expensive punishment.

186NO
186NO
2 years ago
Reply to  Brett_McS

I am a partial anarchist – eg I am “skeptical of all justifications for authority and seeks to abolish the institutions it claims maintain unnecessary coercion and hierarchy”..

Very unsure that a disposition to anarcho-tyranny can be laid at the door of the very “State” that needs to be abolished but I get yer drift…

Nicholas Britton
2 years ago

I don’t feel like I can ever forgive the cops for their heavy-handed treatment of lockdown protestors. Neither do I think the pro-terror marchers are going to respect ths Met for their cowardice toaards them. Wouldn’t be surprised to see that lot turn on the Met police at some point because they know they will get away with it.

Grim Ace
Grim Ace
2 years ago

I have absolutely no confidence in or support for the police anymore. They have become state enforcers and leftist politically. I will not come if the police call for help. Time for citizens to manage their own security by employing private security companies. South Africa has this problem big-time. The polizei have become incompetent and lazy (as all state run apparatus always do) so people who can afford it arrange their own security against crime. In the UK there is now a company catching and prosecuting shoplifters for the supermarkets. And they are so much more efficient than plod (because plod is so focussed on enforcing social conformance rather than crime(
Had enough of rhe police. Waste of police time.

Covid-1984
Covid-1984
2 years ago

Attention Prime Minister Sunak. Sack or move Braverman at your peril. She speaks for the vast majority.

RTSC
RTSC
2 years ago
Reply to  Covid-1984

If he does, I suspect the entire right-wing of the party membership and wider electorate (including the red wall first-time conservative voters) will revolt. It would be the quickest route to electoral annihilation he could take.

186NO
186NO
2 years ago
Reply to  RTSC

That bus to the terminus has already left imho.

186NO
186NO
2 years ago
Reply to  Covid-1984

09.46am, 13.11.2023; TY reports Sunak sacks Braverman. He has clearly to read the “anonymous Met Police Officer” article published in the DM. I do know know if the “AMPO” article is a plant to be used, in some way, by Sunak and those identified by Dorries as the “Lever-Puller” brigade. He refuses to back the litany of testimony from social media footage, shown on some MSM organs but not all, of previous pro -Palestinian, pro Hamas marches, and more particularly in the week of Armistice Day, during which violence has been incited many many times; Poppy sellers assaulted; memorials vandalised, commemorative wreaths stolen, burned, support for a banned terrorist organisation expressed in overtly racist terms ( some of whose leaders reside in the UK…),extremist islamic slogans in arabic that have been translated and then “re-interpreted” by the UFLW Police as exemplified by the Met, posters showing Jewish child hostages torn down (BY THE EFFIN Met FFS), Met Police officers “moving on” or arresting people because by exercising their right to protest they are deemed ( by the Met ) a risk to public order by expressing their legal right to free speech whilst muslims and other deluded groups exercise their… Read more »

varmint
2 years ago

Being “right” doesn’t keep you in a job. In todays woke infested world what keeps you in a job is being politically correct and running with the herd. What we end up with is a government full of hand wringing parasites like Grant Schapps and soon the biggest squirming parasite of the lot (Starmer) will be in charge of the wokery…..jeez what hope for any kind of free thinking people?

pamela preedy
pamela preedy
2 years ago

Sunak sacked Braverman(well-named because she’s a much braver man than little Shushi Knick-Knack will ever be) and reshuffled his Lordship David Cameron into the cabinet. Reminds me of a dog returning to its vomit. Looks as though Sushi will join Gormless Brown in the shame-club of unelected PMs who never won an election. I feel sorry for anyone serving in the Met police who has an ounce of common sense and integrity. It must be daily torture knowing that your Chief Vegetable and higher-ups are cowardly Common-Purposed ar***oles, while most of your colleagues are either crypto-criminals or dancing the wokey-cokey. Maybe ‘the Few’ soldier on in the hope of things getting better, or because they’ve invested so much time in their career for their families’ sakes that it’s difficult to walk away and forfeit the benefits of retirement. Still, the UK police force – sorry, police SERVICE (SO much better with a name change!) – is only one aspect of the utter deterioration in our tax-funded public services that it almost seems harsh to pick on them alone. The gross misgovernance of this country since 1997 has resulted in distrust and contempt for the institutions we used to respect or… Read more »