Tory MP asks government to consider bringing back death penalty

A Conservative MP has called on the government to reintroduce hanging for people who commit violent crimes.

John Hayes, MP for South Holland and the Deepings and a former minister, asked justice secretary David Gauke to consider the “potential merits” of the death penalty.

The option of capital punishment “should be available to the courts” in cases such as that of Westminster Bridge attacker Khalid Masood, he said.

Masood was shot dead by armed officers after mowing down pedestrians and fatally stabbing PC officer Keith Palmer in March 2017, but Mr Hayes suggested that, had he survived, it would have been “appropriate” for the attacker to be hanged.

In a written parliamentary question, the MP, who served as a minister in various departments between 2010 and 2018, asked the justice secretary to “make an assessment of the potential merits of bringing forward legislative proposals to reintroduce the death penalty to tackle violent crime”.

Responding, justice minister Edward Argar said the government “opposes the use of the death penalty in all circumstances and has no plans to reintroduce it”.

Pointing out that the UK is campaigning for the abolition of the death penalty globally, he added: “There is no evidence that capital punishment acts as a deterrent to violent crime. Furthermore, the reintroduction of the death penalty would bring with it the very real risk that some innocent people would die.”

But Mr Hayes told Lincolnshire Live: “We have got an issue in Britain with very serious crime.

“We have had a number of serious crimes, the murder rates increases and barely a week goes by without hearing about some horrific child murder or old people being attacked and killed.

“It seems to me there really needs to be a fitting punishment.

He added: “I say capital punishment should be a sentence available to the courts but the death penalty should not be mandatory – that’s always been my position.

“If you look at the Westminster Bridge attacker, he was shot in cold-blood after someone had taken a proper decision to stop him.

“If he had survived I think most of the British public would have been OK if he had received a fair trial and been hanged – most people would deem that appropriate.”

Mr Hayes also suggested that serial killers Fred West and Harold Shipman could have received the death penalty, saying both had killed themselves “almost as if they knew that was the right thing for them to do.”

Capital punishment ended in the UK in 1965. The last people to be hanged were Peter Allen and Gwynne Evans, who were executed for the murder of John West in Seaton, Cumberland.

The option of the death penalty remained in UK law until 1998, when it was completely abolished.