international news
Police and crime commissioners to be scrapped across England and Wales
Ministers say “failed experiment” will be replaced by councils and mayors
THE government is set to abolish the controversial system of Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs) across England and Wales, bringing an end to a decade-old experiment in elected policing oversight.
PCCs were introduced by the Conservatives in 2012, replacing police authorities and giving one elected individual responsibility for holding each force to account, setting budgets and priorities, and hiring or firing chief constables. The move was sold as a way to boost transparency and make policing more responsive to local communities.
But the system has long faced criticism, with police chiefs complaining about political interference, low turnout in PCC elections, and inconsistent performance between force areas. Labour ministers have now confirmed the roles will be abolished once the current terms expire.
Announcing the plan, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said PCCs had “failed” to deliver meaningful accountability.
“The introduction of police and crime commissioners by the last government was a failed experiment,” she said. “I will introduce new reforms so police are accountable to their local mayoralties or local councils. The savings will fund more neighbourhood police on the beat across the country, fighting crime and protecting our communities.”
Mahmood added that current PCCs would continue in post until the end of their terms and thanked them for their service. The next PCC elections, due in May 2028, will now be cancelled.
Joint Statement from the Police and Crime Commissioners for Wales
A statement was issued jointly by the Police and Crime Commissioners for Wales on Thursday afternoon: “The announcement that the role of Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs) is to be abolished represents a significant moment for policing governance in Wales and across England.
As PCCs, we and our offices perform vital functions that make a real and tangible difference to the lives of thousands of people, from commissioning critical services for victims and survivors, to holding our police forces to account, shaping local priorities, and representing the voices of our communities. This important work will continue throughout any transition period.
While the detail of future governance arrangements has yet to be determined, it has been clear for some time that reform of the policing landscape has been high on the Government’s agenda. Both former and current Home Secretaries have indicated an intention to review and reshape local policing oversight. As this process unfolds, our focus remains on ensuring that accountability, transparency and public service remain at the heart of any new model.
We believe it is essential that the next phase delivers stability, continuity and confidence, for the public, for victims, for policing partners and for the workforce. The transition must not divert attention from what matters most: keeping people safe, supporting victims, and building public trust in policing.
As the future roadmap is developed, we stand ready to contribute our knowledge, experience and insight to help shape the next oversight model. We urge the UK Government, Welsh Government and the Home Office to work collaboratively with us and to consult widely across Wales to ensure that any new arrangements reflect Welsh priorities and maintain the highest standards of accountability and service.
Ultimately, any future system must serve the best interests of policing and the public, safeguarding local accountability while supporting effective, community-focused policing. We welcome the Government’s stated commitment to ensuring that public confidence remains central to policing oversight, and we are committed to engaging constructively to achieve that goal.
The role of PCC may change, but our dedication to the people of Wales and our Force areas remains unwavering. We will continue to champion victims, uphold public confidence, and work tirelessly to ensure that policing in Wales remains responsive, fair and effective through this period of transition and beyond.”
Responding to the news that Police and Crime Commissioners have been abolished, Welsh Liberal Democrat Westminster Spokesperson David Chadwick MP said: “After years of calling for Police and Crime Commissioners to be scrapped, this is a huge Liberal Democrat win.
“The Government must now ensure that the resources wasted on these costly PCCs go into what really matters – improving frontline policing and properly staffing community policing and rural crime teams.”
What happens next
A confidential briefing seen by The Herald states that in areas with an elected mayor — such as Greater Manchester and the West Midlands — those mayoralties will take over PCC responsibilities.
In areas without a mayor, including every police force in Wales, local councils are expected to take on the role via new policing and crime boards. Full details are expected to be announced shortly, including how much money the government believes will be saved and how those savings will be reinvested.
Background: A troubled model from the start
Turnout in the first PCC elections in 2012 averaged just 15%, one of the lowest recorded in any modern UK election. Subsequent contests rarely climbed above 30%.
Several PCCs faced controversy during their terms, including allegations of overreach, resignations, and costly by-elections. Critics said the role created too much power in the hands of one individual, while supporters argued the model brought clearer accountability than the old police authority committees.
For years, independent reviews and parliamentary committees raised concerns about the system’s effectiveness, but no government acted until now.
What it means for Wales
Policing is controlled by Westminster, but PCCs cover the four Welsh police forces: Dyfed-Powys, South Wales, Gwent and North Wales. Wales does not currently have regional mayors with policing powers, meaning new local oversight structures will need to be created.
The move will therefore be one of the most significant changes to policing governance in Wales since devolution.
Who is the current Dyfed-Powys PCC?
The PCC for Dyfed-Powys — covering Pembrokeshire, Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion and Powys — is Dafydd Llywelyn, first elected in 2016 and representing Plaid Cymru. He will remain in office until the government formally dissolves the role.

international news
BBC moves to have Trump’s $10bn Panorama lawsuit thrown out
BROADCASTER tells Florida court it has no jurisdiction and says claim over ‘fight like hell’ edit does not meet US defamation threshold
The BBC is seeking to have Donald Trump’s $10bn defamation lawsuit over an edited Panorama clip dismissed by a federal court in Florida.
Court documents show the broadcaster is preparing a motion to throw out the claim on a number of grounds, including that the Florida court lacks personal jurisdiction over the BBC, the venue is improper, and the case fails to set out a valid legal claim.
The lawsuit centres on a Panorama episode broadcast in 2024 which featured a spliced clip of Trump’s address at a rally on 6 January 2021, shortly before the attack on the US Capitol.
The programme used sections of the speech to create the impression Trump told supporters: “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol… and I’ll be there with you, and we fight. We fight like hell.” Reports say the words were drawn from parts of the speech delivered nearly an hour apart.
Trump alleges the edit falsely suggested he encouraged supporters to storm the Capitol, and he is seeking $5bn in damages on two counts – one for defamation and another under Florida’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act.
In its submissions, the BBC is expected to argue that it did not create, produce or broadcast the documentary in Florida, and that claims it was available to US audiences via BritBox are untrue.
The corporation is also challenging the legal basis of the defamation claim, arguing that Trump, as a public official, must meet the high US standard of proving “actual malice” – meaning the broadcaster knowingly published false information or acted with reckless disregard for the truth.
The BBC has asked the court to pause the pre-trial discovery process while the dismissal application is considered, warning that Trump could seek wide-ranging disclosure covering the BBC’s reporting on him over many years.
A trial date in 2027 has been proposed should the case proceed.
The BBC previously acknowledged the editing was an “error of judgment” and apologised, but has insisted there is no legal basis for a defamation case. It has said it will defend the action and will not comment further while legal proceedings are ongoing.
international news
Grok AI blocks most adult content following UK Government threats
IN a significant development amid growing international concerns over artificial intelligence, Elon Musk’s Grok AI tool has dramatically restricted — and in many cases outright blocked — the generation of adult or explicit images, following intense pressure from the UK government and regulator Ofcom.
Users of the X platform (formerly Twitter), including SuperGrok subscribers, report that even previously feasible artistic or tasteful prompts — such as “a woman nude on a motorbike” framed in a fine art or vintage pinup style — now trigger immediate refusals with the message: “Content Moderated. Try a different idea.”
The changes appear to have accelerated in the days leading up to and including 12 January 2026, coinciding with Ofcom’s formal launch of a high-priority investigation into X under the Online Safety Act 2023. The probe examines whether the platform failed to protect users from illegal non-consensual intimate images, potential child sexual abuse material (CSAM), and other harmful content generated by Grok’s Aurora-powered image tool.
Backlash Sparks Rapid Changes
The controversy erupted in the first week of January when Grok — marketed as a “truth-seeking” and minimally censored alternative to tools like ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini — was widely abused to create thousands of non-consensual “deepfake-style” sexualised images. These included digitally “undressing” real women from uploaded photos, placing them in bikinis or explicit poses, and in some reported cases generating content appearing to involve minors.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer described the outputs as “disgraceful” and “disgusting,” while Technology Secretary Liz Kendall labelled them “vile” and “illegal,” urging Ofcom to use the “full range of its powers” — including potential fines up to 10% of global revenue or even blocking X in the UK.
Downing Street dismissed xAI’s initial response — limiting image generation and editing to paid subscribers around 9 January — as “insulting” to victims and insufficient to address the harms. Critics argued the paywall simply turned a problematic feature into a premium one rather than removing risky capabilities.
In response to the mounting pressure, Grok’s filters have hardened considerably. While text-based adult descriptions remain relatively permissive (staying within strict red lines on real people, minors, bestiality, and necrophilia), image generation of nudity — even in artistic, abstract, or fantasy contexts — has become extremely restricted. Realistic or semi-realistic depictions, especially those involving any real-world elements, now face near-automatic blocks.
Musk’s Response: “Excuse for Censorship”
Elon Musk has framed the crackdown as politically motivated overreach. In posts on X, he has repeatedly described the outcry as providing governments with “any excuse for censorship,” suggesting the focus on Grok is selective because X promotes uncensored discourse compared to other platforms.
Musk has argued that abusers should face consequences equivalent to uploading illegal content directly, while emphasising Grok’s design for “maximum truth-seeking” and minimal ideological interference. However, he has acknowledged the need for pragmatic safeguards to avoid legal risks, without conceding to what he views as broader suppression of free speech.
Implications for Users and the Broader Debate
For everyday users in Wales and across the UK, the restrictions mean Grok’s once-permissive image tool is now far more conservative than in late 2025. Highly stylised or anime-style erotic art occasionally slips through, but photorealistic nudes, specific ethnic framings, or grounded scenarios (farms, bars, motorbikes) are effectively off-limits.
The episode highlights the tension between AI innovation and ethical safeguards. Supporters of Musk’s approach argue that punishing individual abusers — rather than restricting tools for everyone — better preserves freedom. Critics, including UK ministers and victim advocates, insist self-regulation has failed, and enforceable laws (such as the new criminal offence for non-consensual intimate AI images coming into force this week) are essential to prevent mass harm, particularly to women and children.
With Ofcom’s investigation ongoing and potential for fines, access restrictions, or even a UK block of X, the future of Grok’s image capabilities remains uncertain. In the meantime, many users are turning to text-based creative outputs or alternative AI platforms with stricter built-in filters.
As Pembrokeshire residents increasingly rely on digital tools for information and expression, this saga serves as a stark reminder of the delicate balance between technological freedom and societal protection in the age of generative AI.
international news
UK denies involvement in Venezuela strikes as Welsh politicians remain cautious
The UK government has insisted it played no role in recent US military action against Venezuela, as international concern grows over the rapidly escalating situation in South America.
Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer said Britain was “not involved in any way” in the strikes, which were launched by the United States amid mounting tensions with the Venezuelan government. He said the UK was still working to establish the full facts and stressed that respect for international law remained a key principle for his government.

Speaking in London, Starmer confirmed that the UK had not provided military support, intelligence, or logistical assistance and said he had not yet held discussions with US president Donald Trump about the operation.
The Foreign Office has since updated travel advice, warning against all travel to Venezuela and urging British nationals already in the country to remain alert as the situation develops. Around 500 UK citizens are believed to be in Venezuela.
Global concern and political fallout
The US action has drawn sharp criticism from several countries and international bodies, with concerns raised about sovereignty and the risk of wider regional instability. Calls for restraint have come from parts of Latin America and Europe, while debate has intensified in Westminster over Britain’s position.
Opposition parties at UK level, including the Liberal Democrats and Greens, have urged the government to go further by publicly condemning the strikes and reaffirming Britain’s commitment to international law.
Silence so far from Wales
As of now, no senior Welsh politicians have issued formal public statements on the situation.
Leaders from Plaid Cymru, Welsh Labour, and the Welsh Conservatives have not commented directly, reflecting the fact that foreign affairs remain a matter reserved to Westminster rather than the Senedd.
However, international conflicts and military interventions have previously prompted strong views from Welsh representatives, particularly on issues of legality, humanitarian impact and the UK’s alignment with US foreign policy. Political observers expect Welsh voices to emerge as more details become clear.
Why it matters to Wales
Although the conflict is taking place thousands of miles away, the situation has potential implications for Wales, particularly:
- Fuel and energy security, with Venezuela being a major oil-producing nation
- UK foreign policy alignment, a recurring issue in Welsh political debate
- Welsh residents abroad, including those working or travelling in affected regions
With global markets watching closely and diplomatic tensions rising, the coming days are likely to prove critical in determining whether the crisis escalates further — and how firmly the UK, including its political leaders in Wales, chooses to respond.
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