PM 'appalled' at Met Police 'openly Jewish' exchange - as Sadiq Khan to hold urgent meeting with Sir Mark Rowley
Sadiq Khan will hold an "urgent meeting" with Sir Mark Rowley as the Metropolitan Police commissioner faces calls to resign over the force's handling of a pro-Palestinian protest.
Sky News understands the London mayor has full confidence in Sir Mark despite concerns raised about an incident when an officer was captured on video calling a man "openly Jewish" - something a government source said Rishi Sunak was "appalled" by.
The London mayor's office said Mr Khan will hold an "urgent meeting with the Met commissioner" on Monday "to discuss community relations".
It is understood this will include the controversial incident that happened on 13 April.
Energy Secretary Claire Coutinho told Sky News the altercation in London was "completely wrong" and that "what happens next" with regard to Sir Mark was a "matter for the Labour London mayor".
A spokesperson for the London mayor said: "Everybody must feel safe going about in London wherever they please. The way the original incident was dealt with by the Met was concerning and the original response put out by them was insensitive and wrong.
"The Met have an extremely difficult job - particularly so when it comes to operational decisions taken while policing marches.
"But in the end the Met must have the confidence of the communities they serve and it is right that they have apologised for the way the incident was handled and their original public response."
Read more:
New details of exchange between police and antisemitism campaigner
Met Police chief stuck in middle of policing and politics - analysis
As mayor, Mr Khan has the power to effectively sack the commissioner - but can only do so with the permission of the home secretary, who can also require the mayor to dismiss the head of the Met.
Mr Rowley, who replaced Cressida Dick as Met commissioner in 2022, is facing calls to quit following the officer's interaction with Gideon Falter, the chief executive of the Campaign Against Antisemitism.
The Met Police said assistant commissioner Matt Twist - whose initial apology had to be retracted after it suggested the presence of Mr Falter, who was wearing a kippah skull cap, was "provocative" - has offered Mr Falter a private meeting.
He plans to both apologise personally and "discuss what more the Met can do to ensure Jewish Londoners feel safe", the statement added.
"We will do everything we can to constantly develop our approach in response to operational challenges to ensure the trust and confidence of all Londoners," it read. "This is complex, but we will continue to seek the support and insight of all voices who can help us deliver the service London deserves."
In the video, an officer appears to prevent Mr Falter from crossing the road and tells him: "You are quite openly Jewish. This is a pro-Palestinian march. I am not accusing you of anything, but I am worried about the reaction to your presence."
Mr Falter, who was wearing a yarmulke and said he was simply walking past after attending synagogue, was then threatened with arrest if he did not leave the area.
He told Sky News that Londoners cannot have confidence in the Met under Sir Mark's leadership and accused the commissioner of "victim blaming" following the incident, for which he has received two apologies.
Mr Falter was joined in his call for Sir Mark to go by former home secretary Suella Braverman, who said there had been "failure after failure by the Met" over the last six months.
In an interview with Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips, Ms Coutinho repeatedly declined to say whether Sir Mark should quit following the incident, but said what happened was "completely wrong".
"It's not right that one group of people in society should be told they can't go around their daily lives because it might be a provocation to someone else," she said.
"That's not how equality works in this country.
"So I do think they've got it wrong. I think it's right that they've apologised, and ultimately, what happens next is a matter for the Labour London Mayor who has the responsibility to hold the Met to account."
On Sunday morning, the Board of Deputies of British Jews said it would meet Sir Mark following "a series of high-profile errors" regarding its policing of pro-Palestinian marches.
"The entirely avoidable mistakes have had a devastating effect on the previously high level of trust held by the UK's Jewish community in the police", a statement from the group read.
As well as the Board of Deputies, Sir Mark will meet the Jewish Leadership Council and Community Security Trust (CST) next Thursday. The Campaign Against Antisemitism has told Sky News it is not attending the meeting.
Labour's shadow justice secretary Shabana Mahmood said the Met had "not covered themselves in glory" over the incident with Mr Falter but that she did not agree with calls for Sir Mark to resign.
"I can understand the strength of feeling and as I say that footage was very concerning, and I can understand where Mr Falter is coming from," she told Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips.
"But I don't think that the resignation of the Met's commissioner is the way forward."