Trans Activist Group Plots Attacks on PM's Office and MPs, Security Alert Issued
Trans Activist Group Plots Attacks on PM's Office

A militant transgender activist organisation is planning a series of coordinated attacks on the offices of senior UK politicians, including that of the Prime Minister, a major investigation by The Mail on Sunday has revealed.

Targets and Tactics of the Militant Group

The group, known as Bash Back, has explicitly stated its intention to target the constituency office of Health Secretary Wes Streeting, having already vandalised it in July. In a message, the group warned: 'If you think we're done, you've got another thing coming. MP or PM, you've seen us once, we'll see you again.'

The newspaper uncovered that the group is urging its members to form secret 'cells' to plot criminal damage against high-profile targets. A list of potential marks also includes the offices of the Free Speech Union (FSU) and the feminist campaign organisation Sex Matters.

Following the discovery, The Mail on Sunday notified the Metropolitan Police and parliamentary security services. In response, FSU founder Lord Young commissioned an independent security briefing on Bash Back, which advocates for 'total transgender liberation'.

History of Violence and Escalating Threat

Bash Back's first publicly claimed attack was on Wes Streeting's Ilford North office in July. Activists daubed the words 'child killer' on the building and smashed windows. This incident occurred months after the government banned puberty blockers for children, following the Cass Review.

Since that attack, the group has created a detailed action guide for sympathisers, instructing them on how to carry out similar offences. The guide details methods to avoid police detection while committing criminal damage, stealing equipment, and filming their actions.

The security briefing, also obtained by this newspaper, indicates that Bash Back takes extensive measures to conceal its identity. These include stripping internal metadata from public documents and using ultra-secure email systems. The memo states: 'Given the first attack was on the office of a HM Gov minister, almost certainly the group responsible will be investigated by security services.'

Security Services on Alert and Official Condemnation

The security document suggests that British intelligence agencies are now monitoring the trans activist cells. It notes that nearly 3,000 social media profiles following Bash Back could include individuals engaged in, or sympathetic to, criminal activity.

Maya Forstater, chief executive of Sex Matters, commented: 'After years in which police forces rolled out the red carpet for trans lobby groups and harassed women's rights campaigners, it's no wonder that Bash Back seems to believe it can cause criminal damage with impunity.'

A Government spokesman issued a strong condemnation: 'Threats, harassment, and vandalism are not only cowardly, they're criminal and we will pursue anyone who targets politicians and their staff in this way, with the full force of the law. The rhetoric from this group is dangerous and only seeks to distract from our work to improve the lives of trans people.'