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Perspective with Ryan Bridge: Is violent crime really dropping?

Author
Ryan Bridge,
Publish Date
Tue, 25 Feb 2025, 4:47pm
(Supplied)
(Supplied)

Perspective with Ryan Bridge: Is violent crime really dropping?

Author
Ryan Bridge,
Publish Date
Tue, 25 Feb 2025, 4:47pm

So it looks like, on paper at least, that this is a big win for the Government's crackdown on crime.

Violent crime is down for the first time in five years - sure, it's only by two percent, but at least it's not going up. 

2019 - up. 2020 - up. 2021, 2022, 2023 - up, up up. 2024 - down. 

And over those five years of increase, violence went up 51 percent. You basically had to just walk down the street and you'd get punched in the eye.

Mark Mitchell and Paul Goldsmith have fired off press releases quicker than a Chinese warship in the Tasman about this, they're crowing and beating their chests, they're very happy. And you can see why - serious assaults have come down, injuries have reduced, ram raids are down massively, total victimisations are down as well.

And here's the kicker - guess what else has changed at the same time?

The prison population has just hit its highest level since 2018. Police foot patrols are up 40 percent.

So it's almost like - if more bad people are in prison, they're not punching us in the streets. I know, completely unbelievable.

And who would have thought police patrolling the streets might actually prevent crime?

This is, of course, not radical stuff. It's basic stuff.

And on these numbers, the Government finally has something tangible to be proud of.

But - and there's always a but with these stats - retail theft is up 12 percent. People are still walking into shops with their tote bags and taking stuff.

And then there's the stats themselves - this survey that they're using here covers a 24 month window, so it's not a crystal-clear picture that we're getting. Plus, the violence numbers that they're looking at come from a mish-mash of police data via Twitter, of all places. This is from the Government release.

So we can expect some blowback from Labour on that.

But you don't need the stats to tell you - what you feel and what I feel and what we feel and see in our neighbourhoods, and that's more cops on the beat and less violence on our streets.

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