Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Noah Vickers

City Hall policing board member slammed for calling Covid 'greatest hustle' and warning against 'climate lockdowns'

A member of Sadiq Khan’s new policing board has been accused of making “hugely irresponsible comments around the Covid-19 pandemic and climate change”.

In social media posts over the last two years, Sayce Holmes-Lewis has called Covid “the greatest hustle of all time” and warned against “climate lockdowns”.

The latter is a phrase commonly used by conspiracy theorists who claim governments will introduce pandemic-style lockdowns to combat global warming.

Charity CEO Mr Holmes-Lewis was one of 12 people appointed by Mr Khan - from over 300 applicants - to sit on the London Policing Board. Chaired by the Mayor, the Board aims to scrutinise the Met Police, after a review found it was institutionally racist, sexist and homophobic.

Mr Holmes-Lewis’s appointment was criticised last month by City Hall Conservatives, who recalled that he in 2020 told the party’s then mayoral candidate - Shaun Bailey - that he is “obviously not a black man with true lived experience in this matter [of racist policing]”.

Emma Best, City Hall Conservatives’ deputy leader, said of the newly-uncovered posts: "I am deeply concerned that Sadiq Khan believes it appropriate to appoint someone to the Policing Board who has made hugely irresponsible comments around the Covid-19 pandemic and climate change…

“Khan has strongly condemned ‘Covid-deniers’ and ‘conspiracy theorists’, and yet had no trouble nodding through this appointment.”

In another post, Mr Holmes-Lewis said the World Economic Forum “will only seize control if we allow it”. He shared a thread on X, formerly Twitter, purporting to detail “life after the Great Reset”.

The thread, authored by someone else, says: “The Elites want to dictate every aspect of your life from what you eat, to where you go, down to how many times a week you are allowed to shower and wash your underwear.”

After the Standard approached the Mayor’s office and Mr Holmes-Lewis for comment, this last post - sharing the thread - was deleted.

In a now deleted post, Sayce Holmes-Lewis said that the World Economic Forum

Ms Best said Mr Khan should “reconsider how he makes appointments”, adding that the board cannot scrutinise the Met “if they have been handpicked by the Mayor”.

Mr Holmes-Lewis did not comment, but a spokesman for the Mayor said: “Policing in our city needs to improve and change and the voices of Londoners – with a wide range of professional skills and lived experiences – must be at the heart of driving this reform.

“As a board very much independent from the Met, it is expected they will have a variety of strong opinions and perspectives.

“As well as experts in front-line policing and law, the board has strong representation from communities who have been let down by the police and have the lowest levels of trust in the Met – their contribution will be invaluable to driving the level of reform outlined in Baroness Casey’s review.

“The Mayor is pleased to be working with board members and looks forward to the next meeting in December as work continues to publicly oversee and scrutinise the systematic and cultural reform of the police in our city.”

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.