Chair of the Metropolitan Police Federation Ken Marsh has claimed that
Met Police chief Cressida Dick's resignation reflects politicians "trying to use policing and the career of the country's most senior police leader to deflect from their own failings". The federation is a staff association representing more than 31,000 rank-and-file police officers in London.
Marsh told reporters that Dick had been reforming the culture of the police force before she was forced out of her job and that her resignation is "not a move we take lightly".
He pledged that the Metropolitan Police Federation will "continue to speak up for these courageous colleagues", adding, "they are being forgotten about by our elected mayor. Enough is enough. Officers have no faith in [London Mayor] Sadiq Khan".
Marsh underscored that the federation was "sickened" by the alleged incidents of racism, misogyny, and favouritism that have grabbed headlines over recent months, but that they were "not reflective of an entire workforce".
A spokesperson for London Mayor Sadiq Khan was quick to lash out at Marsh's remarks, stressing that "it was the mayor's view that a change of leadership was the only way to address this crisis in trust".
"The mayor has always made clear that there are thousands of incredibly brave and decent police officers at the Met who we owe a huge debt of gratitude. But the series of scandals seen in recent years has tarnished the reputation of the police, which is so crucial to policing by consent", the spokesperson added.
The spokesperson's comments followed Cressida Dick announcing in a memo last Thursday that she had decided to step down from her post after finding out that Mayor Khan, "no longer has sufficient confidence" in her leadership.
UK media outlets have since quoted unnamed sources as saying that a new Met Police commissioner "probably won't be actually at their desk until the summer" because "this is not a quick process".
Prime Minister Boris Johnson, for his part, praised Dick, stressing that he has known her "for many years" and that she "has played a remarkable role as the first female head of the Metropolitan Police".