The liberal ruling class in the United Kingdom, led by Labour Party Prime Minister Keir Starmer, is now teetering on the edge of collapse as a scandal involving migrant grooming gangs explodes into the public consciousness. This isn’t just a political headache—it’s a moral reckoning. For years, unchecked immigration has fueled an epidemic of organized sexual abuse, and the Labour Party’s cowardice in the face of these atrocities is finally catching up with them.
At the heart of the scandal is Jess Phillips, the Labour Home Office Minister for Safeguarding and Violence Against Women and Girls, who blocked an inquiry into Starmer’s role in prosecuting—or more accurately, not prosecuting—a migrant grooming gang in Oldham from 2011 to 2014. According to the Telegraph, Phillips’s move sparked outrage and renewed focus on the UK’s long-standing crisis of migrant grooming gangs, many composed of Pakistani nationals. Critics allege Starmer, who ran the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) from 2008 to 2013, repeatedly failed to address these crimes, even when damning evidence was right in front of him.
In one particularly shocking case in Rochdale, Starmer’s CPS dropped charges against a Pakistani grooming gang in 2009 despite possessing DNA evidence and hours of video footage. Their excuse? The teenage victim wasn’t deemed a “credible” witness. Only when Nazir Afzal took over as prosecutor in 2012 were convictions finally secured. Maggie Oliver, a former detective who helped uncover the abuse, has called Starmer complicit in the systematic failure to protect vulnerable children.
Calls for a national inquiry have intensified, with Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch declaring, “The time is long overdue for a full national inquiry into the rape gangs scandal.” Meanwhile, Labour’s polling has collapsed to historic lows, with Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party poised to snatch victory in the upcoming May elections. The once-mighty Labour Party now finds itself beneath a 27% approval rating, a stunning fall for a party that won a commanding majority just months ago.
Foreign nationals in the UK are disproportionately implicated in sexual offenses, with migrants three times more likely to be arrested for such crimes compared to British nationals, according to The Telegraph. Yet, under Starmer’s leadership, the UK welcomed waves of asylum seekers with minimal scrutiny. Now, the consequences of Labour’s open-border policies are undeniable—and devastating.
Adding fuel to the fire, Elon Musk accused Phillips of protecting Starmer by quashing the inquiry. The billionaire tech mogul’s comments brought international attention to the scandal, leaving Labour scrambling for damage control. Starmer’s response? Accusing critics of “jumping on the far-right bandwagon.” Nothing screams desperation like branding child protection advocates as extremists.
Keir Starmer just claimed people who want a full inquiry into Britain’s rape gangs are “jumping on a bandwagon of the Far Right”
Wanting justice for 1000s of British girls raped by Pakistani gangs is “Far Right?”
Is this Starmer’s biggest mistake yet?
— Martin Daubney 🇬🇧 (@MartinDaubney) January 6, 2025
Labour’s failures to act against these grooming gangs go beyond negligence—they reveal a party more afraid of being labeled “racist” than protecting its citizens. In Rotherham alone, a 2014 report uncovered that at least 1,400 girls were exploited by predominantly Pakistani grooming gangs over 16 years. Similar atrocities unfolded in Telford, where as many as 1,000 girls were victimized. Time and again, local authorities ignored the abuse, fearing backlash for acknowledging the ethnic background of the perpetrators.
This scandal epitomizes the left’s moral bankruptcy. For years, Labour has peddled virtue-signaling rhetoric about inclusion and compassion while turning a blind eye to horrific crimes. The party that claims to champion women and children has instead sacrificed them at the altar of political correctness. It’s no wonder voters are fleeing Labour in droves. As Britain faces this dark chapter, the country needs leaders unafraid to prioritize safety and justice over optics.
The Labour Party’s collapse isn’t just deserved—it’s long overdue. The UK needs bold, unapologetic leadership willing to protect its people and call out the failures of progressive policies. This isn’t a far-right talking point; it’s a matter of common sense. For the victims of these heinous crimes, justice is not a political game—it’s a necessity. And with Keir Starmer’s party on the ropes, perhaps justice is finally within reach.