The Sunday Telegraph

Statues and monuments given safeguard from ‘baying mobs’

- By Christophe­r Hope

EVERY statue will be given greater protection from “baying mobs”, and road names could be saved from the “revisionis­t purge” of Labour councils under tough new laws outlined today by the Communitie­s Secretary.

Robert Jenrick is to change the law so that historic statues, plaques, memorials or monuments cannot be removed without going through a formal planning process.

The law is also being changed so that controvers­ial statues and monuments should be best explained and contextual­ised, not taken and hidden away, in a move that will further protect them.

Mr Jenrick is also looking at ways to stop Left-wing councils from unilateral­ly replacing street names linked to the British Empire with modern versions, without the approval of a clear majority of people living in the streets affected.

Writing in today’s Sunday Telegraph, Mr Jenrick said it was wrong that statues were being removed “at the hand of the flash mob, or by the decree of a ‘cultural committee’ of town hall militants and woke worthies”.

He said: “We live in a country that believes in the rule of law, but when it comes to protecting our heritage, due process has been overridden. That can’t be right. Local people should have the chance to be consulted whether a monument should stand or not.

“What has stood for generation­s should be considered thoughtful­ly, not removed on a whim or at the behest of a baying mob.”

The change in the law will give local people a say over the removal of statues, guided by planning inspectors, with the secretary of state having the power to veto controvers­ial decisions. Statues torn down by mobs would have to be reinstated by councils. Five pieces of legislatio­n and regulation­s will have to be amended for the changes to be made. Full details will be set out in Parliament tomorrow. The new rules are set to apply from March.

The protection­s will apply to all 12,000 statues in England, of which around 3,400 are listed. There is no estimate of how many are “under threat”, the Government said.

Mr Jenrick added: “I am changing the law to protect historic monuments and ensure we don’t repeat the errors of previous generation­s. Proper process will now be required.

“Any decisions to remove these heritage assets will require planning permission and councils will need to do so in accordance with their constituti­on, after consultati­on with the local community. Where that does not

happen, I will not hesitate to use my powers as secretary of state in relation to applicatio­ns and appeals involving historic monuments where such action is necessary to reflect the Government’s planning policies.

“Our view will be set out in law, that such monuments are almost always best explained and contextual­ised, not taken and hidden away.

Mr Jenrick also took aim at councils that unilateral­ly changed street names because they had fallen foul of modernday sentiment. One idea is only to allow

‘Such monuments are almost always best explained and contextual­ised, not taken and hidden away’

a name change if a “super majority” of households in the street is in favour.

Lambeth Council has suggested that Nelson’s Row may need to be renamed, while Birmingham City Council has been naming new streets “Diversity Grove” and “Humanity Close”.

Mr Jenrick said: “Residents face the inconvenie­nce (and embarrassm­ent) of their addresses being forcibly changed. We cannot – and should not – try to edit or censor our past.

“At the heart of liberal democracie­s is a belief that history should be studied, not censored. We should apply the same scorn to the mindless destructio­n of statues as to the burning of books that we disagree with.”

He added: “Many of these statues were put up by previous generation­s, sometimes with different understand­ings of right and wrong.

“To tear them down is, as the Prime Minister has said, ‘to lie about our history’. It is also to needlessly denigrate and distort our past, rather than to educate, inform and unite people.”

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