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UK politics: West Midlands crime commissioner resists calls for immediate sacking of chief constable – as it happened | Politics


West Midlands PCC ignores calls to sack chief constable now, and indicates he will take time to reach decision

Simon Foster, the Labour West Midlands police and crime commissioner (PCC), has indicated that he will not sack Craig Guildford, the chief constable, on the basis of the report out today.

In a statement, Foster says that he understands, and shares, the concerns expressed by many people about the force’s handling of the Maccabi Tel Aviv fan ban. But he also signals that it would be wrong to rush to judgment.

He says he did not get the Andy Cooke report in advance, and that he wants to give it “careful and detailed consideration”.

He also points out that Cooke is due to publish a further, final report on West Midlands police, and that in his letter (or preliminary report) published today he says his views may “develop or change” as more information comes in.

He says the Commons home affairs committee has not published its report yet.

He goes on:

It is my statutory duty to hold the chief constable to account for the totality of policing in the West Midlands.

In order to give all these issues full and proper consideration, I will be taking this matter to a meeting of my accountability and governance board, held in public, on Tuesday 27 January 2026 and asking questions of the chief constable.

In consideration of these matters, it is vital that all involved act in accordance with due process and the law at all times.

The reference to “totality of policing” may be significance. As Vikram Dodd has reported, in some respects Guildford, who became chief constable in 2022, has a good record. The force is now solving 15% of crime, up from 3% when he took over. “Violent crime is down, and times to answer emergency calls, which were among the worst in the country, are now among the best,” Dodd says.

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Key events

Early evening summary

  • West Midlands police is so far ignoring calls for its chief constable, Craig Guildford, to resign. (See 5.31pm.) In the Commons Shabana Mahmood said she has lost confidence in Guilford after a “damning” report found intelligence used to justify a ban on fans of an Israeli football team from a game was “exaggerated or simply untrue”. Most MPs who spoke backed her critical assessment, but Mahmood said that she did not have the power to sack Guildford herself. She said that was up to Simon Foster, the Labour police and crime commissioner for the West Midlands. Foster has indicated he wants to take his time before making a decision. (See 4.43pm.)

For a full list of all the stories covered on the blog today, do scroll through the list of key event headlines near the top of the blog.

Shabana Mahmood in the Commons today. Photograph: House of Commons
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