Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has called calls in a leaked Home Office report for the definition of extremism to be expanded to cover misogynists, conspiracy theorists and extreme left.
The assessment suggested that extremism should be categorized as concerning behavior and activity instead of ideologies, including the distribution of wrong information and Involvement in 'an online subculture called The Manosphere'.
It says that claims of 'twofold' police work are an example of a 'right -wing extremist story' and those care gangs are a problem that is exploited by the extreme right to address hatred against Muslims.
After the details of the report were leaked through policy exchange of the think tank policy, Jarvis, the Minister of Security, said that he and Mrs. Cooper had rejected her recommendations, despite the fact that they had submitted the assessment.
Emma Reynolds, the city minister, doubled this morning by saying that ministers were planning to continue to concentrate on Islamic extremism and extremely right -wing ideology.
Asked whether the government was willing to broaden the definition of extremism, she told you Morning Britain: 'We have rejected the recommendations in the leaked report, and we will clearly disable our plans when ministers come to the Lower House do so in the usual way . '
Among those who pour contempt on the recommendation of the assessment was formerly with super -intendent Dal Babu, who warned that a widened definition of extremism would continue to push the police resources.
“I think, to be honest, we are currently struggling with the resources we now have with terrorism,” he told the BBC.
Yvette Cooper – depicted meeting police – has rejected the findings of a controversial home office rating
The report says that there is now a 'more diverse' assortment of extremist beliefs, ranging from anarchists and environmental protesters to those obsessed with a massacre in school and an online subculture of women's hogers who are called the 'manosphere'.
But experts from the policy exchange Think tank, who have shown a copy of the unpublished home office document, say that it means that it is brought the risks of radical Islamism and the prevention of the occurring teams trying to stop with those They are radicalized terrorism.
Paul Stott and Andrew Gilligan said last night: 'Many of these supposed other extremisms simply do not meet the test of the damage of national security or safety.
'The government must certainly be alerted by, and should tackle, violence against women and other social damage – but they are not extremism as defined so far.
The 'Rapid Analytical Sprint' launched by Mrs. Cooper in the aftermath of the Southport murders and the riots they fueled last summer also proposes a new approach to counter-extremism based on the actions of people and the damage they Instead of the ideologies to which they subscribe to which they subscribe to which they subscribe to, to which they subscribe to which they subscribe to which they subscribe, also
It says that there is now a 'more diverse' range of extremist beliefs, ranging from anarchists and protesters from the environment to those obsessed with blood baths at school and an online subculture of women's lords called the 'male atmosphere'.
The report also insisted on the use of the police use of controversial 'non-crime hatred incidents' and introducing a new crime of 'harmful communication' to tackle online abuse of members of parliament, which is concerned about freedom of expression .
The 'Rapid Analytical Sprint' launched by Mrs. Cooper after the murders in Southport. Axel Rudakubana (photo) was convicted last week for at least 52 years behind bars
The leaked assessment admits that counter-extremism has long been a difficult policy challenge for the government 'because extremism is broader than terrorism and includes everything, from generating community stresses to spreading conspiracy theories.
It states: 'The reach of extremist beliefs and ideologies that subscribe individuals is becoming more diverse, from extreme right-wing Islamic extremism to extreme misogynia to left, anarchist and single-issue extremism.
“In addition, school massacre and online Gore Subcultures and conspiracy theories, although no ideologies, can lead to harmful fixations on violence.”
The claims in the document, written in November, were supported last week by Sir Keir Starmer when he warned of a 'new threat' of extreme violence of 'Lonsers, Misfits, young men in their bedroom'.
And the sections on extreme right-wing ideology also reflect the controversial claims of the prime minister that people who protested about the murders of Southport 'extreme right' and that politicians called for a national investigation into care gangs 'reinforced what was the extreme right'.
One page mentions care gangs as an example of 'complaints stories' that can be exploited, which states:' Right extremists often use cases of alleged group-based sexual abuse to promote anti-Muslim sentiment, as well as related anti-government and anti-'political correctness' stories. '
Another section refers to the idea that popularity in the aftermath of last summer's riots are that police and courts treat white offenders more seriously than those of ethnic minorities.
It claims: 'Right extremist stories (especially around immigration and police) are' leaks' in regular debates in some cases. Claims of 'two -fold' police work, in which two groups are reportedly treated differently after similar behavior, is a recent example. '
Rioters in Rotherham during the summer -wide unrest. Part of the report refers to the idea that popularity was in the aftermath of last summer that the police and courts treat white offenders more seriously than those of ethnic minorities
And a discussion of tactics states: 'ERW actors are busy with protest and sometimes violence. This often includes hijacking existing local complaints about observed inequalities about access to resources (eg benefits, migrant hotels 'etc.).'
The report urges the government to assume an ideological agnostic approach to extremism, not to base on a strict definition, but on 'behavior and care activity'.
It recommends a 'broader approach' to tackle the problem, including new 'punitive measures'.
After Axel Rudakubana, 18, guilty last week argued for killing three girls in a dance class with Taylor Swift theme, Sir Keir Starmer said it was understandable that the public would look at the crime and “wonder what the word terrorism means'.
The prime minister said that the teenager represented a new kind of threat, other than political or ideologically motivated terrorism, with 'extreme violence committed by loners, misfits, young men in their bedroom, who have online material online, desperately for fame'.
He said that, if necessary, the government would change the law to recognize the 'new and dangerous threat' and to revise our entire counter-extremist system to ensure that we need what we need to defeat it ' .
Rudakubana was referred three times to the anti-terror program, but those references were closed because of his apparent lack of a clear ideology.
Last night the home office emphasized that none of the 38 recommendations in the report has been agreed by the ministers to date.
A spokesperson said: 'The Extremism Sprint counter tried to fully assess the challenge for our country and lay the foundation for a new approach to tackle extremism – so that we can prevent people from being attracted to hateful ideologies. This includes tackling Islamism and extreme right -wing ideologies, which are nowadays the most prominent.
“The findings of the sprint have not been formally agreed by ministers and we consider a wide range of potential next steps that come from that work.”