The police may have witheld information at the time, but they might have had good reason to do that. The courts would decide if anything was not done according to due process if the IOPC is seen to ignore the actions.The only thing I'll agree with is your point about voting out the Tories. That was a huge mistake which people are beginning to realise and pay for.
However we saw an example of government totalitarianism with the hastily implemented prosecutions and silencing of criticism on social media after the events surrounding the Southport child killings and that the government had barely been voted it so it was clear that contingency plans were already afoot to deal with such events before the Labour government had even been elected.
Make no mistake, I neither condone nor support the violence that we saw after the child killings nor the online incitement to violence but it was clear that the police/establishment covered up the facts which contributed to the violence that followed. They used the ploy that the perpetrator was born in the UK so it couldn't have been terror related. Sadly just because a goat is born in a stable, it doesn't make it a horse and terrorism doesn't necessarily mean that the perpetrators were born elsewhere.
Journalists and ordinary people are now receiving visits from the police for something they said online or in print based on nonsense non-crime hate incidents....that's reminiscent of Cold War East Germany's STASI so to claim that we live in a society that supports freedom of speech unfortunately doesn't ring true and I've no doubt that things will only be even more restricted if government's get their way.
Those that were arrested on the day were dealt with using evidence obtained at the scene. That some people were gradually being contacted, and prosecuted by the state, it is because they have been identified as having been involved in violence or inciting others to violence, which means the system works. There is no hidden agenda for these actions. It is the only process that can succeed. The police must follow the law, submit the facts and evidence to the CPS and then to the courts. That is our system, and it works.
Again, if journalists are approached and/or arrested by the police for something they published, then the arrest must be supported by evidence of a crime. In the absence of evidence, there is no crime, unless the case is still under investigation. The police can ask questions.
I'm interested in knowing what you think the 'non-crime hate incidents were...