Mahmood has no confidence in police chief after Israeli fan ban
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood says she has lost confidence in West Midlands Police's chief constable after Israeli football fans were banned from a match against Aston Villa.
Mahmood told MPs a "damning" review from the policing watchdog over the intelligence that led to Maccabi Tel Aviv fans being banned showed a "failure of leadership".
The force has apologised saying it did not deliberately distort evidence that was used by Birmingham's Safety Advisory Group for the 6 November game.
Chief Constable Craig Guildford remains in post, but faces a meeting on 27 January to be questioned by Police and Crime Commissioner Simon Foster who has the authority to sack him.
Mahmood told the Commons on Wednesday she intended to restore the power for home secretaries to dismiss chief constables "who fail their communities".
Guildford has written a letter, in which he apologised for providing incorrect evidence to a Home Affairs Select Committee, which included the denial that AI was used in a report that led to the Israeli fans' ban.
Mahmood told MPs His Majesty's Chief Inspector of Constabulary Sir Andy Cooke had found "confirmation bias" in police intelligence gathering.
She said: "The force, we now discover, conducted little engagement with the Jewish community and none with the Jewish community in Birmingham before a decision was taken."
Sir Andy's interim report, commissioned by Mahmood, found that "rather than follow the evidence, the force sought only the details to support their desired position to ban the fans," Mahmood told MPs.
"He shows that the police overstated the threat posed by the Maccabi Tel Aviv fans, while understating the risk that was posed to the Israeli fans if they travelled to the area," she said.
Sir Andy's review found eight inaccuracies in a report from the force to Birmingham's safety group, including a reference to the non-existent Tel Aviv-West Ham game.
Others included overstating the number of Dutch police officers deployed during a Maccabi match in Amsterdam and claims Muslim communities had been intentionally targeted by Tel Aviv fans.
The decision on the ban from the safety group - which is made up of representatives from the council, police and other authorities - prompted political outrage, including from Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.
Guildford has insisted the decision was not politically influenced.