TL;DR
Mitie has enhanced its vetting procedures for bodyguards after one with far-right links was assigned to an MP under threat. The new measures include regular social media checks and random audits of existing staff.
The security company that provides bodyguards for MPs has tightened its vetting processes after it sent a bodyguard with far-right links to protect a politician who was under threat from extremists.
Mitie, which has a £31m contract for the work, is updating its CPO (Close Protection Operative) vetting processes to include regular social media checks. There will also be random checks on the social media activity of those already taken on.
Concerns about the threat to MPs from extremists – including Islamists and the far right – have risen, with elected representatives facing a level of threat not seen since the campaign mounted by Irish republican terrorists in the 1980s and 70s.
Mitie’s contract followed the assassination of the Conservative MP David Amess by an Islamist terrorist in 2021. This came five years after the killing of the Labour MP Jo Cox.
Harassment and crimes against MPs have reached record levels, with cases doubling in two years to nearly 1,000 annually as of March, according to the latest figures.
Cases include that of the Green MP Hannah Spencer, who needed a police escort when she was targeted by men who disrupted a protest against the far right.
Contacted by the Guardian after MPs privately raised their concerns, a Mitie spokesperson, said: “Our priority is the safety of the people under our protection, and we hold our close protection officers to the highest standards. If those standards are not upheld, we take appropriate action as soon as practicable.”
All of the company’s close protection officers have Security Industry Authority licences, the mandatory legal requirement for individuals working as security guards, door supervisors and CCTV operators.
Social media checks were part of the vetting process but Mitie is understood to have tightened up this kind of vetting earlier this month.
Last month, a minister told parliament that threats against female MPs were having a “chilling effect” on women thinking of going into politics.
This week, a 42-year-old man from Blackpool was handed a 12-month restraining order and fined £120 after disrupting a jobs fair organised by Chris Webb, the Blackpool South MP. Webb said afterward that the case was not an isolated incident and he had received “a barrage of constant threats, including death threats” from the far right since winning a byelection for Labour in 2024.
“This escalation is not simply about the safety of MPs – it represents a serious and growing threat to the health of our democracy,” he said, adding that colleagues had experienced a rise in threats.
“Attempts to intimidate or silence those in public service are an attack on the rights and freedoms that underpin our political system. We must do more to ensure the safety and security of MPs and their families, or we risk further tragedies.”