In the last week the gap between the Tories and Labour has continued to narrow -the last time I posted Martin Baxter's predictions it suggested a 76 seat majority whereas polling up to last Saturday reduces this to 72.
It remains to be seen if the attack in London and the 'debate' about policing and Theresa May's 'urgent' call for a review of security policy will work to the Tories advantage. But while Labour has always been seen as weak on policing, and the reduction of police numbers began under the last Labour government, Labour will be on stronger ground if it focuses on what it is that resources are used for.
Boston, in the USA has shown that better community policing can bring local people and law enforcement into a better and non-confrontational relationship, though there is a clear need for accountability on the part of LE to maintain confidence in communities that they matter, so that in the end the outcome is a reduction of crime- the stark difference being confrontational policing that views 'difficult' inner-city and often poor districts as war zones where might is right.
http://harvardpolitics.com/united-st...ity-relations/
The reduction of police numbers is relevant if it means that community policing is either non-existent or so stretched as to be ineffective. Whether or not it would prevent fanatics from killing people I don't know, but I would expect a closer engagement of policing with the public to be a good thing, and it would be a human intelligence aspect that the fetish for controlling the internet cannot match. It has been claimed Theresa May wants internet controls as severe as those in China, but I suspect that peer-to-peer and encrypted communications are now standard though it also seems that once decisions have been made, the organizers and perpetrators of massacres go silent.
Whatever the arguments are, an election Theresa May called on leadership and Brexit, has spun out of her control, and it proves that 'events' can rapidly undermine political strategy -but that in this case there does not appear to have been a 'Plan B', which confirms in the comparison with the EU Referendum, that we have a generation of politicians who, if not entirely useless, are unable to think through their own policies to imagine a world without them.
Theresa May's internet policy may be here (doesn't really tell you much)
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-st...-a7774221.html