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Britons Overwhelmingly Support a New Grooming Gang Inquiry


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A significant majority of Britons favor a fresh national inquiry into the grooming gangs scandal, according to a recent YouGov survey. The poll reveals that more than three-quarters of the public support calls for a thorough investigation, escalating pressure on political leaders to address the issue comprehensively.  

 

The survey, commissioned by the Women’s Policy Centre, found that 76 percent of respondents advocate for a new inquiry into the systemic sexual abuse of children by grooming gangs. This sentiment transcends political affiliations, with nearly two-thirds of Labour voters, 84 percent of Conservative supporters, and a striking 91 percent of Reform party backers expressing support.  

 

In contrast, only 13 percent of adults agree with the Government’s stance that no further investigation is necessary. Among Labour voters, just one in five shares this view, signaling a disconnect between party leadership and its base.  

 

The poll’s findings emerge amidst a heated political debate on being explicit regards the ethnicity of the majority of these gangs and why they were hidden and concealed as a result. Labour MPs recently opposed a Conservative proposal in the House of Commons aimed at initiating a national inquiry. This opposition comes despite mounting calls for action, including vocal advocacy from Andy Burnham, the Labour Mayor of Greater Manchester. Burnham has urged the Government to consider a “limited national inquiry” to address the issue. However, his appeals have been met with resistance from senior Labour figures, including Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy. “I wouldn’t of course ever rule out any further inquiries at all,” she told Sky News, but maintained her opposition to Burnham’s suggestion.  

 

Meanwhile, Labour veteran Baroness Harriet Harman has proposed a targeted approach, suggesting a “mini-inquiry” to examine how council workers and police can better handle race and ethnicity-related challenges. She highlighted the challenges faced by individuals such as Ann Cryer, a former Labour MP, who faced accusations of racism when addressing sensitive issues like forced marriage and grooming gangs. “The question is how people actually deal with this,” Baroness Harman said, emphasizing the need for nuanced solutions.  

 

The issue has also gained attention outside traditional political circles. Tech billionaire Elon Musk, a prominent figure on social media platform X, has repeatedly spotlighted the scandal, intensifying public discourse.  

 

Paola Diana, chair of the Women’s Policy Centre, emphasized the urgency of the matter. She stated, “The poll proves the demands for a fresh inquiry are a national issue of huge concern.” The widespread public support underscores the need for a comprehensive response, one that addresses past failures while ensuring systemic changes to prevent future abuses.  

 

As the debate continues, the Government faces growing pressure to heed the overwhelming public demand for accountability and reform. The question remains whether political leaders can align their actions with the public’s expectations to address this deeply troubling issue.

 

Based on a report by Daily Telegraph 2024-01-11

 

Related Topics:

Politicians Must Address the Ethnicity of Grooming Gangs, Says Whistleblower’s Aide

Grooming Networks Persist in Oxford, Warns Former Investigator

Convicted Rochdale Grooming Gang Leader Still in the Town & not Deported

Starmer Condemns 'Lies and Misinformation' Over Child Sexual Abuse

UK Ex-MP Claims Grooming Gang Ethnicity Was Suppressed to Protect Votes

Elon Musk Advocates for Tommy Robinson’s Release Amid Criticism of UK Leadership

Kemi Badenoch Urges National Inquiry into UK Grooming Scandal

 

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  • Thanks 1
Posted
7 minutes ago, The Cyclist said:

 

What I find ironic, and rather amazing, that people can conflate grooming gangs with being anti-immigration.

 

I also find it ironic, and rather amazing, that people can conflate immigration with illegal immigration.

 

I also find it ironic, and rather amazing, that people, which includes the utter bellthronk that is the current UK PM, can accuse, the victims, of all people, as being Right Wing.

I think marrying a basic understanding of Venn diagrams to members posting history might help you overcome your irony.

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Posted

I think a big part of this is the way we raise girls these days in the UK.

Feminists have taken over the narrative and are living in dreamworld.

Our young girls are sitting ducks for these perverts.

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Posted
14 minutes ago, herfiehandbag said:

The use of a three line whip by the government, to ensure a call for an inquiry was defeated, rather gives a hint at the inevitable result of any attempt to pass a Private Members Bill or opposition sponsored Bill.

 

As for"vigilante justice", the political and establishment determination to do nothing except maintain a very obvious coverup creates a (dangerous) vacuum which will be filled by the very same extremist bogeymen they keep raising, vigilantes and meddling creatures like Musk.

 

Still, Chomper, as so often lately, a sterling effort to defend the indefensible!


It seems you too don’t understand how Parliament functions.

 

The Tories, aided by Reform, voted against the Children’s Welfare and Schools Bill at its second reading.

 

There was no possibility of a second inquiry being added to the Bill.

 

Pure knee jerk reaction and grandstanding in response to Musk trolling on X.

 

 

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Posted
26 minutes ago, Bkk Brian said:

Jeez, didn't think I'd see a post victim blaming the girls in an attempt to distract from who committed these horrible rapes against them, How sickening. :sick:

Obviously you have weak comprehension skills.

I was blaming their parents, not them.

Parents are probably too busy playing on their phones to supervise their daughters.

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Posted
7 minutes ago, JonnyF said:

 

Harris shares your love of Venn diagrams.

 

Also your inane leftist out of date mindset. 

 

Oh, and failure to gaslight people into re-electing a liberal government.

 

Progressives are generally seen as regressive these days. Everywhere except the UK but that will change at the next election.

 

Your silly "Progressive" views are out of date. A failed experiment that will be mocked by historians. A dark 3 decades in an otherwise glorious Western history. 

 

 

I am actually quite in favour of certain ( by no means all) "progressive ideas", and am certainly liberal ( note the lower case "l", since we are discussing matters in a UK political framework).

 

This business is not a result of progressive ideas or liberal thinking.

 

It is a matter of brutal politics. The grooming and rapes were from the start ignored by a political establishment greedy to curry the favours of a particular ethnic group in certain towns and metropolitan areas whose votes, usually wielded as effectively a block, were central to their political powerbase.

 

It was an amoral and disgraceful decision which led to these gangs activities flourishing, and the cover up being ever more desperately maintained to preserve power (and careers) until the bubble inevitably burst.

 

It is entirely possible to hold to progressive and liberal ideals, and be utterly opposed to this cover up, and seek action on and retribution for these foul matters. I do hold, and do seek!

Posted
6 minutes ago, MalcolmB said:

Obviously you have weak comprehension skills.

I was blaming their parents, not them.

Parents are probably too busy playing on their phones to supervise their daughters.

Trying to justify the victim blaming now, it can get no lower, its now the parents fault not the barbarians who groomed then raped them. Vile stuff from you

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Posted
20 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said:


It seems you too don’t understand how Parliament functions.

 

The Tories, aided by Reform, voted against the Children’s Welfare and Schools Bill at its second reading.

 

There was no possibility of a second inquiry being added to the Bill.

 

Pure knee jerk reaction and grandstanding in response to Musk trolling on X.

 

 

I understand how Parliament works, and I understand that a Government with an assured parliamentary majority for the next 4 years could have reintroduced in short order and passed this bill.

 

I also understand the rather cynical, and again I will use the term "amoral" political imperative which drives this same government to increasingly desperate attempts to maintain the cover up, attempts which centre on preventing an inquiry.

 

Musk? I regard him as an odious meddler, I doubt he has any concerns with justice or the girls so terribly treated. I don't read Twitter or X, but I see that he has moved to fill a vacuum which inept political handling has created. I also suspect that Reform UK ( with some of whose aims I sympathise, although I am not sure I would vote for them, except possibly in coalition) will come to regret their association with him.

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Posted
2 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said:


A disgusting comment calling for vigilante justice.

 

The means to achieve a second inquiry is to present a bill calling for a second inquiry in Parliament. Any MP can raise a Private Members Bill, any party can raise 
a party sponsored Bill.

 

To date non have done so.

 

Seems to me there is not much left to do.  

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Posted
2 minutes ago, herfiehandbag said:

I understand how Parliament works, and I understand that a Government with an assured parliamentary majority for the next 4 years could have reintroduced in short order and passed this bill.

 

I also understand the rather cynical, and again I will use the term "amoral" political imperative which drives this same government to increasingly desperate attempts to maintain the cover up, attempts which centre on preventing an inquiry.

 

Musk? I regard him as an odious meddler, I doubt he has any concerns with justice or the girls so terribly treated. I don't read Twitter or X, but I see that he has moved to fill a vacuum which inept political handling has created. I also suspect that Reform UK ( with some of whose aims I sympathise, although I am not sure I would vote for them, except possibly in coalition) will come to regret their association with him.

Alleged cover up.

 

My cynical view is Musk has offered vast sums of cash to Reform but has since signaled his displeasure with Farage.  
 

Too much money for other rightwing parties to not notice.


If I’m correct we’ll see more Rightwing Party knee jerk reactions to Musk’s meddling.

 

Meanwhile the correct way to raise a request for a second inquiry is to debate it on its own merits in Parliament.

 

 

 

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