The Prime Minister has been warned that according to two senior government guards, he will fail to meet his goal of reducing violence against women and girls without significant investment in services.
It is the first time a domestic misconduct commissioner for England and Wales Dame Nicole Jacobs and the victims for England have jointly written to the Sir Kire Stormer by the Commissioner of the Commissioner and Wales Barrows Nyulov.
The pair said that the aggrieved assistance services were “pushed to the verge” by cutting and financing rising costs.
The intervention comes ahead of the Chancellor’s expenditure review at the end of this month, expected to cut some areas of public expenses.
In another headache for ministers, the country’s most senior police chiefs have also warned the Sir Kire Stmper that they will have to face the “Stark Option”, about which crimes should be investigated whether their budget is cut.
The BBC understands that the home office, who is responsible for both the victims and the police forces, is still in conversation with the Treasury how the money will be allocated in the review of the expenditure.
In a letter viewed by the BBC, the commissioners told Sir Keir that the expenditure was a chance to define the legacy of the government for the victims and the remaining people.
The pair said that they welcomed the Prime Minister’s “personal commitment Reduce violence against women and girls Within a decade, “but said” funding cuts and scalled backs are leading to ambition pieces policies “.
He said that “with bold and ambitious investment, we can finally deal with the systemic stains of violence and misuse” and said that “the cost of inactivity is one that this country can no longer tolerate”.
As mentioned in the first timeMetropolitan Police chief Sir Mark Rowle is also among those who took care against the cut in the next week’s expenditure, he said that he would return to Herald to the frontline police numbers.
The Home Secretary Yatete Cooper and Chancellor Rachel Reeves are allegedly seen as “the trick of the final-khai” by the police chiefs, who say the conversation between the home office and the Treasury is going “bad”.
Sir Mark, the head of Gavin Stephens, the council of the National Police Heads, and the head of the National Crime Agency (NCA), Graeme Bigggar made direct appeals to the PM around the “far -reaching consequences” of the decisions.
“We understand the Treasury [is] This week, demanding the finalization of departmental budget allocation and the conversation between the house office and the Treasury is deteriorating, “he wrote.
“We are deeply worried that compromise for policing and [NCA]Without additional investment, we risk a pruning for what we saw under penance. It will have far -reaching consequences. ,
The austerity policies of the Conservative Government saw a decline of 45,000 police between 2010 and 2016, since 2016, with national statistical data, there has been a 24% increase in violence against individual offenses in the last 12 months since 2016.
The letter from the police chiefs explained how government money “has not coordinated with demand”, which has left a very limited place for maneuver “within the police services.
“An agreement that fails to address our inflation and pay pressure, in the flat there will be the option that we will tell about the crimes that we no longer give priority.”
“Policing and NCA workforce will also shrink every year.”
Last week, the Times revealed that the police chiefs and MI5 warned the government that Initial release scheme represented threat to public safety,
Rowle was one of the six police chiefs who publicly warned that promises on crime would break without more money than Treasury.