The recording of hate incidents not crime by police forces in England and Wales must be discarded in all but some cases, conservatives said.
The party will try to amend the draft crime and government police to prohibit forces registering such incidents, at limited circumstances.
The conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said that hate incidents not crime (Nchis) had “wasting police time chasing ideology and complaint instead of justice.”
But Police Minister, Diana Johnson, said the plan was “involuntary” and “would prevent the police from monitoring serious anti -Semitism and other racist incidents.”
The NChi are defined as alleged acts perceived as motivated by hostility or the preacher towards people with certain characteristics, such as careers or gender.
They are recorded to collect data on “hate incidents that could become more serious damage”, but do not equal a criminal offense, according to the orientation of the Ministry of Interior.
The police guide on Nchis recording was first published in 2005, after recommendations of an investigation into the murder of Stephen Lawrence.
On Tuesday marks 33 years since he was killed in a racial motivation attack in southeastern London.
The conservatives said it was not intentional that their announcement reached the anniversary.
The NChi are not registered at the national level by a single source and not all police forces publish data on the number of incidents they record.
Last year, the telegraph newspaper reported that 43 forces in England and Wales had registered more than 133,000 hate incidents without crime (NChi) since 2014.
In 2023, the conservative government changed the guide on the recording of Nchis In England and Wales.
The new guidelines say that officers should consider that a complaint was “trivial” or if the incident was motivated by “intentional or damage hostility.”
At that time, the Secretary of the Interior of Shadow, Chris Philp, was a police minister and in a statement to the parliamentarians, said: “If someone is white due to the hostility or prejudice towards their race, religion, sexual orientation, disability or transgender identity, and the criteria in the code are fulfilled, the incident can and must be recorded as an incident of hatred without trade.”
But conservatives under Badenoch’s leadership say the “use of Nchis has become out of control.”
Badenoch said the police forces did not follow the updated guidelines on the use of Nchis “so it is time to get rid of them completely.”
The party said that under their plans, only senior officials could register NChi in clearly defined circumstances, such as prevention or real investigation.
“The British public wants the police in the streets, fighting crime and protecting families, not tracking social networks for things that someone could find offensive,” Badenoch said.
She said that Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer needed “standing up, showing courage and supporting real surveillance about political correction.”
Police Minister Diana Johnson said the conservatives were “14 years in charge of surveillance to establish priorities or make policy changes in this area, and did not.”
He added: “Instead of introducing involuntary measures that would prevent the police from monitoring serious anti -Semitism and other racist incidents, conservatives should support the prioritization of the neighbor of the Labor Government.” “
A spokesman for the United Kingdom’s reform said: “Conservatives were 14 years old in the government to do this, instead we saw hate incidents without crime under their surveillance.
“The reform is clear, we want to have more bobbies in the rhythm and put an end to the surveillance of two levels in Great Britain. Police forces throughout the country should focus on solving real crimes, not monitoring publications on social networks.”
The BBC has approached the Liberal Democrats and the Green Party to comment.
Surveillance and crime are among the issues that political parties have been campaigning before the local elections of next week in England.
In an interview with the BBC, Badenoch said the conservatives were preparing for a difficult set of results.
He defended his leadership of the conservatives and insisted that he would not be influenced by internal criticisms about the amount of policy he had announced so far.
“It is really important that we take the time to get things right: rebuild trust with the public and have a credible sacrifice,” Badenoch said.