Source: The Observer, UK Contact: Melanie Phillips AGAINST ALL POLITICAL TRENDS - A POPULAR HOME SECRETARY Once upon a time, in that strange and faraway land before 1 May last year, the Home Office was the politicians' graveyard. In they strutted, all those Tory and Labour Home Secretaries, only to slink away at the end with boos and catcalls ringing in their ears. Down every Home Office corridor lurked an elephant trap. Crime? It never went down. Civil liberties? The Home Secretary was invariably against them. Prisons? The most optimistic scenario was to keep the lid screwed down on that sulphurous cauldron. Now something weird is happening. Jack Straw is rewriting the political rules. Dammit, the man is a popular Home Secretary! He is proving to be the safest pair of hands in the Cabinet. All about him is disarray. Welfare reform has come off the rails. The economy is looking distinctly unwell. Education reform is a hologram, a fact which may become all too apparent now that Stephen Byers has moved on to greater things. The PM himself has been fingered for Cronygate, the Martyrdom of St Frank, and for delusions of presidential grandeur in the Downing Street "rose garden", not to mention tantrums in Tuscany. Yet last week the Home Office was getting on with it as usual, diligently dispensing yet more New Realism with its probation and prisons Green Paper. Of course, not everything is going to win Straw universal plaudits. On the civil liberties front, he is behaving like - well, like any other Home Secretary. His proposals to end the asylum shambles may create further shambles. And unless he backs up his support for marriage by concrete proposals, his family policy will become just another sham. However, Home Secretaries are judged principally by how they handle the core issues of crime and punishment. And here Straw has hardly put a foot wrong. He has swapped ideology for pragmatism. So he wants to know 'what works', and then he'll back it. This is what lay behind the research review published the other week. This caused shrieks of dismay that the dreaded Home Office culture of appeasement was rising from the ashes and Straw was going soft on crime. True, that review did strike some jarring notes. Damning "zero tolerance" policing as it did with the faint warning that it might prove counter-productive in the long-term had a whiff of appeasement about it - not least because the short-term results seem so spectacular, and the thing hasn't been around long enough for there to be any long term yet. But the review's main message was that the criminal justice system plays merely a peripheral role in the fight against crime. And that's absolutely right. Nothing - neither imprisonment nor community sentencing - works by itself, because it's all merely shutting the stable door after the horse has bolted. To counter crime effectively, the emphasis must shift to fixing the stable locks. Yet here again, the review gave rise to some qualms. It was conspicuously silent on the single most significant and constant factor among criminals: their shattered family lives. The emphasis in the Crime and Disorder Act on tackling the root causes of crime in childhood is excellent. But if Straw relies too heavily on research by academics who subscribe to a politically correct herd agenda, he'll go wrong. His general approach, however, is sound, as is his policy of "making prison work", an astute way of turning Michael Howard's infamous phrase into something that combines populism with realism. His decision to continue building private prisons does stick in the throat, though, principally because depriving people of their liberty is simply a responsibility that should not be farmed out to profit-making companies. But Straw, like everyone else, is at the mercy of the Treasury. And the Treasury thinks private prisons are a roaring success, and it is hard to argue against this. After initial teething problems, they're being run as well if not better than regular prisons, not least because of the absence of the baleful Prison Officers' Association. More important is what happens inside them. Again, Straw has indicated that he will encourage regimes that do some good: more education, for example, or more programmes to tackle drug abuse and target other offending behaviour. But such good intentions will come to nothing if the prisons remain full to bursting. The size of the prison population is perhaps the most sensitive area of Straw's criminal justice brief. It is certainly the one over which he is most coy. And here we enter a murky area. In opposition, Straw was criticised for talking the prison population up by his "tough on crime" rhetoric. He was responding to a perceptible change in the public mood, which seemed to date from the murder of James Bulger when something in the collective psyche appeared to snap. After that, judges and magistrates felt public opinion demanded longer sentences and they had to respond. No politician disabused them. Now Straw is responsible for the system, he knows full well that bursting prisons can derail his policies and reputation. But still he chooses not to talk down the prison population, because he judges the public mood remains fearful. He is choosing instead a more subtle approach, such as the centralisation and rebranding of the Probation Service proposed in last week's paper. To persuade both the public and the courts that non-custodial penalties are no soft option, no doubt probation will be given some faintly chilling new name: the National Corrections Service, perhaps, or a title with Public Safety in it, which would sound like something from the French Revolution. But the courts take their line from the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Bingham. And here the murk really descends. Bingham is known for his enlightened views about the importance of crime prevention and so forth. Yet in practice his messages to the bench have been distinctly mixed. When he sat in Liverpool crown court a while back to keep his hand in, he passed a stupendously stiff sentence which left the regular bench aghast. So judges and magistrates are confused by the ambiguity. But the word is that Bingham feels he's getting ambiguous signals from the Home Office. And remarkably, the Lord Chief Justice is said to be terrified of upsetting the Home Office - - and, doubtless, public opinion. Never mind the charge that Jack Straw plays politics with the prison population. The alarming signs now are that the judges are doing the same thing. The courts, however, should dispense justice, not populism. But Straw is a real politician. And as such he is positioning himself with great sure-footedness. It is impressive - and to his rivals, deadly. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett