It's rare to hear anything at all about Britain's Departmental Permanent Secretaries. Even scandal doesn't usually push their names into the headlines. So Sir David Normington's decision to speak to the BBC - for a programme about Sir Ian Blair's...
submitted by
TaxPayersAlliance on 8th Jun 2009 (via taxpayersalliance.com)
Sir Ian Blair will give evidence in public to the Metropolitan Police Authority's inquiry into race and faith discrimination in the Met. The inquiry, set up by Boris Johnson following a series of damaging claims by ethnic minority officers during Sir Ian's tenure as Met commissioner, had previously been told by Sir Ian when he accepted its invitation to appear before its panel that he wo...
submitted by
Guardian on 19th Mar 2009 (via guardian.co.uk)
Boris Johnson is, as I have long maintained, a great man. It is no small achievement to have prised the prehensile policeman away from his office. Sir Ian Blair announces his resignation I won't rehearse the case against Sir Ian Blair all over again. If you want the full charge-sheet, read this and this. The man was vain, touchy and inept, and presided over an unforgivable misdirection of the...
submitted by
DanielHannan on 2nd Oct 2008 (via blogs.telegraph.co.uk)
Less than two weeks ago I wrote about the failings of Sir Iain Blair; Ian Blair has led the Met to the brink of disaster. I highlighted political correctness, infighting within senior ranks and, of course, the Jean Charles de...
submitted by
CentreRight on 2nd Oct 2008 (via conservativehome.blogs.com)
Sir Ian Blair, perhaps the most political policeman in Britain, has protested about the "politicisation" of his office. What really bothers him, of course, is not that the office should be politicised, but that its direction should be set by Boris Johnson, who is answerable to Londoners, rather than by him, Ian Blair. In a delightful slip, the Commissioner added: "I will continue to stay in offic...
submitted by
DanielHannan on 7th Aug 2008 (via blogs.telegraph.co.uk)
A "significant" statement is expected on the future of Met Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair, the BBC understands.
submitted by
BBCPolitics on 2nd Oct 2008 (via news.bbc.co.uk)
So farewell then Sir Ian Blair. Just 29 days ago the Metropolitan Police Chief was mocking reports that he was set to be ousted. "The report of my death is an exaggeration,'' he told reporters, quoting Mark Twain. Sir Ian Blair has been an increasingly unpopular commissioner Well, not much, lord copper. Perhaps we can be hardly surprised, particularly given that Jacqui Smith, the Home Se...
submitted by
ChristopherHope on 2nd Oct 2008 (via blogs.telegraph.co.uk)
Press Release Mayor’s statement on resignation of Sir Ian Blair 2-10-2008 509 “Sir Ian Blair has made a lasting and distinguished contribution to policing, in London and across the UK, for the last 34 years. He will be especially remembered for his successful introduction in London of the Safer Neighbourhood teams and for falling crime levels virtually across
submitted by
BorisJohnson on 3rd Oct 2008 (via boris-johnson.com)
When Sir Paul Stephenson took over as Scotland Yard commissioner he promised a clean break from the gaffe and scandal laden years of Sir Ian Blair.
submitted by
Telegraph on 9th Apr 2009 (via telegraph.co.uk)
Leadership controversy still haunts Sir Ian Blair as report claims plans are afoot to oust him
submitted by
Guardian on 4th Sep 2008 (via guardian.co.uk)
As a keen historian and Oxford academic, it would not surprise Britain's most senior policeman, Sir Ian Blair, to find that his enemies are those he should be able to trust most.
submitted by
Telegraph on 14th Jul 2008 (via telegraph.co.uk)