David Cameron, in his speech on "Broken Britain" today, stands accused of "easy populism" and sending out different messages over his policies.
On the day the Edlington Two were sent down, David Cameron has been accused of “easy populism” and “playing politics“ after giving a major speech on what he called the “social recession” and “moral failure” at the heart of “broken Britain”.
In the speech, the Conservative leader defended his controversial marriage proposals, which had been dismissed as “social engineering” by Shadow Business Secretary Ken Clarke last year, imploring the public to “think of the signals” government was sending out.
He also said that he would support “every sort of family” and would “back Sure Start” – a completely mixed signal itself given his marriage tax plans and Shadow Universities Minister David Willetts’s remarks yesterday that “only a few” of the 3,197 Sure Start centres wouldn’t be abolished under a Tory government.
And, answering questions after his address, he brushed over the 8 per cent fall in crime, claiming “we have a problem with violent crime” and “we have had violent crime rising” – this in spite of the British Crime Survey’s 2008/09 figures, released yesterday, which showed a 4% fall in violent offences, burglaries down 8%, robberies down 9% and car crime down a fifth.
Further analysis of the “Home Office Statistical Bulletin: Homicides, Firearm Offences and Intimate Violence 2008/09” report reveals that:
• Homicides (651) are down 14% from 2007/8 (753) – the lowest level for ten years, since 1998/9 (642);
• “Sharp instrument” homicides are down 6% from 271 to 255;
• Shooting homicides are down an even sharper 26% from 53 to 39;
• All firearms offences are down 18% from 17,378 to 14,250 – the fifth consecutive fall;
• Firearms offences resulting in injury were down from 4,164 (24% injury rate) to 2,458 (17%); and
• Prevalance of domestic abuse is down for men (5%-4%) and women (7%-6%) since 2004/5.
Longer term, violent crime – classed as robbery, sexual offences, assault and murder – is down nearly half (48%) since its peak in 1995.
Sources: Office For National Statistics, British Crime Survey, Home Office
15 Responses to “Cameron sending out mixed messages over Sure Start, crime and family”
amol rajan
i'm inclined to agree RT @Jessica_Asato Excellent stuff by @leftfootfwd on crime stats http://bit.ly/511anI
Joe
Good post Tim. Whenever I ask people, out of interest, what they think has happened to the rate of crime over the past 13 years, they inevitably say it’s gone up. Sensationalist reporting and conjecture really masks one of Labours greatest achievements.
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