Victims of sexual offences face ‘postcode lottery’ with police, says home secretary
The home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, has said victims of sexual offences face “a postcode lottery” in terms of how the police will deal with their report.
“It is a postcode lottery at the moment if you are a victim in terms of the standard of service you are going to get when your allegation is being investigated by the police and whether that is going to lead to charges ultimately and hopefully a successful prosecution”, Mahmood told Trevor Phillips on Sky News.
The home secretary was responding to claims from the Institute for Government that currently up to 50 per cent of police officers currently on sexual violence and rape squads are trainees. She said the government plans to get a specialist squad in ever force.
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Updated at 04.04 EST
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The prime minister has commented on “deeply distressing news” from Australia, where there have been multiple deaths after a shooting.
Sir Keir Starmer posted on X: “Deeply distressing news from Australia. The United Kingdom sends our thoughts and condolences to everyone affected by the appalling attack in Bondi beach. I’m being kept updated on the developing situation.”
Starmer had earlier this morning posted a message sending his “warmest wishes” to families celebrating Chanukah.
Deeply distressing news from Australia.
The United Kingdom sends our thoughts and condolences to everyone affected by the appalling attack in Bondi beach.
I’m being kept updated on the developing situation.
— Keir Starmer (@Keir_Starmer) December 14, 2025Share
Updated at 05.08 EST
Sir Keir Starmer is “not going,” Shabana Mahmood insisted as she conceded “every single person” has thought about the top job.
Asked whether she would run for the leadership if the Prime Minister stepped down, the Home Secretary told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg show: “Well, Keir Starmer is not going.”
Asked again, she said: “Every single person has thought about it, of course they have, but that is not the same as plotting to overthrow a Prime Minister for God’s sake.
“The Prime Minister is getting on with doing his job. I am a member of his Government. I have a big job of my own to do, and that is the only thing I’m focused on.”
Prime minister Keir Starmer steps out from 10 Downing Street to welcome prime minister of Belgium Bart De Wever ahead of their meeting in London, United Kingdom on December 12, 2025. Photograph: Wiktor Szymanowicz/Future Publishing/Getty ImagesShare
Shabana Mahmood has said everyone in Labour has a “role to play” in supporting the Government, amid fresh speculation about Andy Burnham’s ambitions.
The home secretary was asked about reports that the Greater Manchester Mayor is seeking a return to the Commons, which allies of Mr Burnham have not denied.
She told Sky News’s Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips programme: “Well, I think that, and again, I was on your show, just saying this a few weeks ago… Labour governments don’t come along very often, and every minute that we have in government is precious.
“It’s a privilege to be in government. I’m focused on the big job that I have as home secretary, and my advice to all colleagues everywhere would be that it’s a precious privilege, and we mustn’t waste a single minute of it.”
Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham. Photograph: Ryan Jenkinson/Getty ImagesShare
The home secretary has said the government was not “demonising” young boys in trying to tackle violence against women and girls.
“I think this is not on the young boys themselves, this is on all of us as a society”, Shabana Mahmood told Laura Kuenssberg on the BBC. “We have seen huge changes in the social media environment and the sorts of influences that are pervasive across the childhoods of both our boys and our girls in this country and it is for us as a government and a society to decide what we do about that.
“This is not on children to sort out, this is not about demonising our children, it is about protecting our children, it is about making sure we raise our children in an environment where they can be healthy, where they can be successful, where they can rise as far as their talents take them, that is the dream we have as a Labour government.”
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Leading barristers have warned the justice secretary David Lammy that plans to cut a right of appeal from the magistrates court is “profoundly dangerous”.
Lammy’s proposals, which include curtailing the right to jury trial for all but the most serious offences, also include a plan to remove the automatic right to appeal against a decision made by magistrates to the crown court, in a bid to cut the backlog.
Ed Henry KC, who represented postmasters in the Post Office Horizon scandal, told the Sunday Times: “The scrapping of automatic appeals to magistrates’ courts’ decisions is profoundly dangerous … Everyone accepts that justice in the magistrates’ courts can be hit and miss.”
Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy speaking during the launch of the Government’s anti-corruption strategy at home and abroad to strengthen national security and drive growth, at Mansion House in London. Photograph: Lucy North/PAShare
Shabana Mahmood said that any strikes in the NHS “undoubtedly” put lives at risk.
Asked what she thought of how doctors had dealt with the dispute, the Home Secretary told Sky News’ Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips: “I think it’s undoubtedly the case that strikes in the NHS do put lives at risk.
“We want to make sure that the NHS is supported through a difficult winter and through this particular flu outbreak that we’re seeing at the moment, and I just think it’s really important that everybody realises what’s at stake here.
“I do think there’s a bit of a difference between the stance that the leadership of the resident doctors has taken and the individual views of those doctors themselves.”
She said: “These are very hard-working public servants, but they have seen the best deal of anyone in the public sector.”
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Society ‘very far to the other side of what is acceptable’ in misogynist freedom of speech
The home secretary has said society is “very far to the other side of what is acceptable” in terms of freedom of speech which is misogynist.
Shabana Mahmood was asked by Trevor Phillips on Sky News whether the government was crossing a line in trying to clamp down on young men being interested in misogynist influences like Andrew Tate.
“There is always going to be a line but we are very far to the other side of what is acceptable of that line at the moment”, Mahmood said.
“It is right that we think about how we give schools and parents the tools they need to make sure they are raising boys who will grow to be healthy young men in their own right, with a good understanding of what a healthy relationship is.
“It is important that the state takes some action, because we are not willing to just sit back and accept that VAWG is just a fact of life.”
Shabana Mahmood leaving Downing Street, London. Specialist rape and sex offences investigators will be introduced to every police force as part of reforms to be introduced under the Government’s violence against women and girls (Vawg) strategy. Photograph: James Manning/PAShare
Updated at 04.19 EST
The flu outbreak is “very serious” and resident doctors should accept the deal on offer to avert strike action as the NHS is under “huge strain”, Shabana Mahmood said.
Asked how serious the outbreak was, the home secretary told Trevor Phillips on Sky News: “It is very serious, we’re already seeing the impact it’s having on hospitals across the country.
“We always plan every single year for a flu outbreak and that’s what happened this year. But of course, I think the numbers are a bit more serious this year and that’s why the Health Secretary, the Prime Minister and everyone across Government wants to make sure that the planned strikes by resident doctors do not go ahead.
“The NHS is under huge strain at the moment, and the last thing anybody needs to see are strikes in the NHS.”
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Victims of sexual offences face ‘postcode lottery’ with police, says home secretary
The home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, has said victims of sexual offences face “a postcode lottery” in terms of how the police will deal with their report.
“It is a postcode lottery at the moment if you are a victim in terms of the standard of service you are going to get when your allegation is being investigated by the police and whether that is going to lead to charges ultimately and hopefully a successful prosecution”, Mahmood told Trevor Phillips on Sky News.
The home secretary was responding to claims from the Institute for Government that currently up to 50 per cent of police officers currently on sexual violence and rape squads are trainees. She said the government plans to get a specialist squad in ever force.
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Updated at 04.04 EST
Good morning, we will be following all the latest developments in UK politics this Sunday. The home secretary Shabana Mahmood and the new boss of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, Dr Mary-Ann Stephenson will be speaking to the BBC this morning. We are also expecting Mahmood and her opposite number, Conservative shadow home secretary, Chris Philp, to speak to Sky News. Some updates so far this weekend:
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Kemi Badenoch says the Conservatives will abandon plans to ban the sale of new petrol and diesel cars by 2030 if they win the next election. Writing in the Sunday Telegraph, the Tory leader described electric vehicle quotas as “economic self-harm”.
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Sir Keir Starmer condemned the two-child benefit cap as a “failed social experiment”, accusing the previous government of having “punished working families and directly pushed hundreds of thousands of children into poverty”.
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The health secretary, Wes Streeting, has called on the Conservatives to maintain the cross-party consensus on gender identity services built before the last election in a letter to Kemi Badenoch. Streeting wrote to opposition leader on Friday urging her to “take the heat and the ideology” out of debate amid controversy over a puberty blocker trial for children.
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Starmer is poised to choose a new ambassador to Washington from a shortlist of three as relations with the US are tested over Ukraine and Donald Trump’s attacks on European leaders. The prime minister held interviews with three finalists for the role this week, the Guardian has learned, with Downing Street preparing to make an appointment before the end of the year.
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Leading organisations have criticised the development of the government’s flagship violence against women and girls strategy, calling the process chaotic, haphazard and “worse than under the Tories”. Ministers are gearing up for a policy announcement blitz before the publication of the long-awaited plan next week.
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