Home Office
Revision as of 10:27, 30 September 2014 by Olivia Rendall (talk | contribs)
This article is part of the Counter-Terrorism Portal project of Spinwatch. |
The Home Office is a leading British governmental department that is responsible for policy issues surrounding immigration, passports, drugs, crime, the police and counterterrorism. The current leader of the Home Office is Theresa May (MP). [1]
The Home Office has two main sister departments that are involved in work surrounding immigration, passports and counterterrorism. These are: the Identity and Passport Service and the UK Border Agency.
Goals
The Home Office states that its aims and objectives are based on seven key issues:[2]
- Help people feel safer in their homes and local communities
- Support visible, responsive and accountable policing
- Protect the public from terrorist attack
- Cut crime, especially violent, drug and alcohol-related crime
- Strengthen our borders, fast track asylum decisions, ensure and enforce compliance with our immigration laws, and boost Britain's economy
- Safeguard people's identity and the privileges of citizenship
- Work with our partners to build an efficient, effective and proportionate criminal justice system
People
Ministers
- Theresa May - Secretary of State for the Home Department
- Norman Baker - Minister of State for Crime Prevention
- James Brokenshire - Minister for Security and Immigration
- Mike Penning - Minister of State for Policing, Criminal Justice and Victims
- Karen Bradley - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Minister for Modern Slavery and Organised Crime)
- Michael Bates - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Criminal Information
Special Advisers
Notes
- ↑ The Home Office: About us, The Home Office - accessed: 11 October 2009
- ↑ Our Objectives and Values, The Home Office - accessed: 11 October 2009