
Rishi Sunak pledged that police will have whatever powers required to crack down on disruptive protests, following a meeting with police chiefs in Downing Street.
The Prime Minister called it âcompletely unacceptableâ that ordinary people were having their lives disrupted by environmental protests.
Police chiefs said they had a âconstructiveâ meeting with Home Secretary Suella Braverman and policing minister Chris Philp to discuss tackling the âguerrilla tacticsâ used by Just Stop Oil protest groups.
It is completely unacceptable that ordinary members of the public are having their lives disrupted by a selfish minority
Rishi Sunak
Mr Sunak, who joined the start of the roundtable hosted in No 10 on Thursday, said: âThis afternoon I sat down with all the police chiefs to make it clear that they have my full support in acting decisively to clamp down on illegal protests.
âIt is completely unacceptable that ordinary members of the public are having their lives disrupted by a selfish minority.
âMy view is that those who break the law should feel the full force of it, and thatâs what I am determined to deliver.â
Police chiefs issued a statement following the talks in Downing Street, describing the meeting as âconstructiveâ.
Chief Constable BJ Harrington, the National Police Chiefsâ Council lead for public order and public safety, said it showed a âjoint commitment to tackling criminal activism while respecting lawful protestâ.
âWe are not anti-protest, but we are anti-crime. Police are committed to responding quickly and effectively to activists who deliberately disrupt peopleâs lives through dangerous, reckless, and criminal acts.
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Mr Harrington, the head of Essex Police, said forces were âfully prepared to deal with further disruption planned ahead of Christmasâ.
Earlier Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley suggested efforts by officers are having an effect and said he is âabsolutely determinedâ that anything that goes beyond lawful, reasonable protest will be âdealt with robustlyâ.
But he also admitted that some trials may not take place for two years amid delays in the criminal justice system.
Mr Sunak, asked if ministers will bring in new legislation or boost powers for officers, said: âWe are currently giving the police new powers so that they can clamp down on these illegal protests.
âThey will have my full support in acting decisively and rapidly to end the misery and the disruption thatâs being caused to ordinary families up and down the country.
âIâve said to the police whatever they need from Government they will have in terms of new powers.â
Iâm absolutely determined that anything that goes beyond lawful reasonable protest by creating serious disruption to London, by creating damage to property, will be dealt with robustly
Sir Mark Rowley, Met Police Commissioner
Mr Harrington, speaking to the PA news agency after the meeting, said Ms Braverman had praised the work of the police.
He said the Home Secretary shares their concerns and âshares our ambition to make weâre as effective as we can beâ.
âSheâs respected our operational independence, which is an important part of British policing. But she is there to help us to make sure we get the balance right, to make sure weâve got the right powers, which I think we have,â he said.
He added that police chiefs used the meeting to request that Parliament and the Government be clear on the legal definition of âserious disruptionâ.
But he also acknowledged concerns about delays and backlogs in the court process, saying: âAny delay in the court system is justice delayed, whether thatâs for the victim or the suspect.â
Earlier the Met Commissioner told the London Assembly that Just Stop Oil had got âmuch less assertive in their recent protestsâ.
âFrankly, as a consequence of a large number of their leaders being remanded in custody as a result of our operations,â he said.
âIâm absolutely determined that anything that goes beyond lawful reasonable protest by creating serious disruption to London, by creating damage to property, will be dealt with robustly,â he added.
âThatâs why weâve used the more serious offences such as the statutory offence of public nuisance â we put the best part of 60 offenders before the courts at one stage for that offence.â
Sir Mark said most of the trials for members of the environmental activist group are scheduled to take place in 2024 due to delays in the criminal justice system.
Earlier this week, Just Stop Oil protester Jan Goodey, who caused âmile after mileâ of tailbacks on the M25 after climbing up a gantry, was jailed for six months after admitting causing a public nuisance.
The 57-year-old was part of a demonstration on behalf of the climate group which forced authorities to close sections of the UKâs busiest motorway during the morning rush-hour on November 7.
In September, Goodey, from Brighton, East Sussex, had been handed a two-year conditional discharge for obstructing the highway in a separate protest last year.
District Judge Daniel Benjamin said he had âflagrantly ignoredâ previous warnings that his conduct âwas not acceptable in a peaceful and democratic societyâ.