Sewella Braverman is expected to include stop and search as part of the «common sense guard» she believes should be enforced. Photo: Guy Corbishley/Alami
Suella Braverman will urge police to stop indulging political correctness and focus on basics like stop and frisk to fight crime.
Ministers are expected to be confirmed on Wednesday The Home Secretary will demand that the police focus on «criminal justice, not social justice.»
In a speech at the opening of a new «back to basics» think tank, Ms Breiverman will tell police that wants them to focus on pursuing criminals rather than «indulging politically correct considerations.»
She is expected to include a stop and search as part of a «guardian of common sense», which she believes should be done without fear or preference. Criticism is that blacks are seven times more likely to be stopped and searched.
This follows previous calls from the Home Secretary for police to stop investigating non-crime hate incidents because someone is offended and criticism authorities for not fighting courtship gangs for fear of being labeled racist.
Public Address At the Security Foundation think tank, Ms. Braverman will say: “Everything our police do should be about reducing crime and keeping people safe.”
“My vision for policing based on common sense, as clear as public opinion. This means focusing on deterring and capturing criminals rather than pandering to politically correct considerations.
“This means that police officers and women coming from the communities they serve are familiar with local issues and familiar with local people. Police common sense means that the police are focused on the administration of criminal justice, not social justice. This is what the public wants.
“I believe in the police. But the policing that I believe in is not politically correct, but based on good old common sense.» >Swella Braverman will say that «policing, which I believe in, has nothing to do with political correctness.» Photo: cover images
The foundation was founded by Rory Geoghegan, a former Metropolitan Police officer who became Boris Johnson's crime-fighting adviser. . In an article for The Telegraph, he said he gave up his job as a police officer because of the senior policemen's neglect of investigating «low-level» crimes that have poisoned people's lives.
On Monday evening, Rishi Sunak said he was «confident» the government was «on the cusp» of fulfilling Boris Johnson's three-year-old promise to recruit 20,000 additional police officers by this month.
«This will be an important moment , which means we have more cops in England and Wales than ever before,” he said.
“It’s not just about getting more cops on our streets, it’s also, once upon a time, an opportunity for a generation to change the face of the police force by recruiting more women and people from ethnic minorities and making the police force more representative of the communities they serve.”
However, police watchdogs, concerned about the number of inexperienced officers, with 38 percent of police officers estimated to have been on duty for less than five years.
There have also been claims that some police forces have achieved their performance only by delaying the dismissal or return of officers who left earlier than planned previously. It is believed that the Meteorological Police did not achieve its goal, but it is believed that its «vacant» positions were redistributed among other forces.
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