Widdecombe Death Probe Reignites Safety Debate for 650 MPs as UK Weighs Wider Protection
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 14
Widdecombe Death Probe Reignites Safety Debate for 650 MPs as UK Weighs Wider Protection
3 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 14
Summary
Counterterrorism police taking over Ann Widdecombe’s death investigation pushed MP security back to the center of Parliament, where lawmakers held a sombre Commons debate on access versus protection.
Sir Bernard Jenkin said MPs face a higher risk of violent death than members of the armed forces or police, while several lawmakers argued social media has normalized abusive and violent language.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said the government may need to go further and offered Nigel Farage a meeting with Ravec, the committee that oversees MPs’ security arrangements.
Reform said it rejected a state-funded protection package for Farage last year because it cut his security by 75%, underscoring disputes over how threats to public figures are assessed.
The debate has widened beyond Westminster’s 650 sitting MPs to former politicians and other prominent political figures, raising questions about who qualifies for protection and whether public life is becoming harder to enter.