Keir Starmer landed back in the UK this morning after attending the COP30 Summit in Brazil. He may have wished he’d have stayed in South America for a bit longer.
The Labour leader arrived home to a huge row engulfing members of his own Cabinet over the bungled release of Algerian sex offender and thief Brahim Kaddour-Cherif. Senior members of his Government said of Mr Lammy’s handling of the mistaken “It’s cowardly. He should have fronted up and owned it.”
“The handling is terrible.”
Housing Secretary Steve Reed dismissed the rumoured rift as “tittle tattle”.
But these are damaging moments for a Prime Minister trying to prevent his Government from veering off the rails.
Mistaken releases undermine confidence in the entire justice system, leaving people feeling unsafe.
And if the Government can’t help people feel safe, confidence in the very essence of the state will be eroded even further.
It is certainly true to suggest that the prison crisis was a ticking time bomb when Labour took office. The Tories were preparing emergency plans to release pressure on the prison estate.
But the early release scheme, which has allowed almost 40,000 offenders out after serving just 40% of their sentence – instead of the usual 50% – has added further chaos, leading to more mistakes and convicts let out when they shouldn’t be.
Justice is often one of the forgotten departments in Whitehall. It is treated as an afterthought.
But for Keir Starmer, this is not an option.
His former Chief of Staff, Sue Grey, warned that the prison system’s collapse was one of the biggest issues facing the then-incoming Labour Government.
No 10 must have a similar laser-like focus on the justice system.
There are too many problems emerging for it not to be one of the central focuses of this Government. People didn’t vote for criminals to be released early under very controversial sentencing reforms or early release schemes.
They certainly don’t vote for a surge in mistaken releases and a Government which can’t get a grip on a crisis.
And they won’t back a Government that loses control of the justice system and the criminals it is supposed to be locking up.
Otherwise, people really will remember the Labour Government as one that criminals ran riot over – and got let out early in the process.
