New justice secretary looks likely to appeal to the Tory right with a tough approach to the criminal justice system

This article is more than 8 years old

This article is more than 8 years old

Prison should not be a place where convicts can fritter away hours on end watching satellite television in their cells, new justice secretary Chris Grayling has said.

Grayling, who replaced Kenneth Clarke at the Ministry of Justice in the cabinet reshuffle earlier this month, said he also had no intention of cutting prisoner numbers.

He said he did not want inmates to enjoy prison, telling the Daily Mail the criminal justice system needed to be one in which the public could have confidence.

He said: "I'm bringing a fresh pair of eyes to the job. I'm very mindful of the need to have a criminal justice system in which people have confidence. I think they very often don't have confidence in it."

Grayling added: "Prison is not meant to be a place that people enjoy being in. I don't [want to] see prisoners in this country sitting in cells watching the Sunday afternoon match on Sky Sports.

"Am I planning to reduce the number of prison places? No I'm not. I do not want to set a target to reduce the prison population.

"What I do want to do is bring down the cost of prison. The whole philosophy I will bring to the department is getting more for less."

The decision by David Cameron to appoint Grayling was seen as a nod to the Conservative right, who have long seen a tough justice system as central plank of any Tory agenda and saw Clarke as a soft justice secretary.

Clarke oversaw the scrapping of indeterminate sentences for the most serious offenders, while apparently embarking on policies aimed at reducing prison numbers.

But despite his tough stance on prison numbers, Grayling said he was supportive of Clarke's policies to rehabilitate inmates.

Private firms could be paid according to results, he said, in a nod to a policy introduced by Clarke.

He also promised to bring an end to the stalking of victims by inmates using social media after they have successfully smuggled mobile phones in to prison.

"It's completely unacceptable," he said. "I've talked to victims of crime who are effectively being stalked by the person who attacked them.

"It is the case that mobile phones are smuggled into prisons. We have powers to take tough action on that front, blocking signals, other ways of clamping down on it."