logo
Starmer hits back at Badenoch over grooming scandal, claiming Tories did nothing

Starmer hits back at Badenoch over grooming scandal, claiming Tories did nothing

Yahoo8 hours ago

The Prime Minister has suggested Kemi Badenoch did nothing about grooming gangs when the Tories were in power, as a political war of words erupted after a major report in the scandal was published.
Sir Keir Starmer questioned 'why on earth' the Conservative leader did not bring forward a mandatory duty for authorities to report child sexual exploitation when she was a minister.
'Why didn't you do it? Why didn't you say one word about it?' he added in a message to the Opposition leader, as he spoke to reporters at the G7 summit in Canada.
Sir Keir's rebuttal came after the Tory leader called a Westminster press conference, where she denied politicising the issue but attacked people who she claimed sought to 'tone police those who are pointing out when something has gone wrong'.
The PM also contrasted his time working as England and Wales' chief prosecutor, and his initial years as an MP when he called for mandatory reporting, with Mrs Badenoch's time in Government.
'Kemi Badenoch, I think, if I remember rightly, was the minister for children and for women, and I think the record will show that she didn't raise the question of grooming once when she was in power, not once, not one word from the dispatch box on any of this,' he told reporters.
'Chris Philp (the shadow home secretary), I think, went to 300-plus meetings when he was in his position in the Home Office and at not one of those meetings did he raise the question of grooming.
'So, I know there's some discussion of this 'far-right bandwagon'. I was actually calling out politicians, nobody else, politicians who in power had said and done nothing, who are now making the claims that they make.'
Asked if Mrs Badenoch was now weaponising the issue, he said there used to be a time with more cross-party consensus and that the focus should be on individual victims.
'I mean, the question for Kemi Badenoch is, why on earth didn't you, you were in power, you had all the tools at your disposal.
'I was calling even then for mandatory reporting. Why didn't you do it? Why didn't you say one word about it?'
Speaking at the press conference, the Conservative leader earlier said: 'I do think that we should take the politics out of it. But who was it that said when we raised this issue that we were pandering to the far right?
'That's what brought the politics into it.'
Her comments follow an interview in which Baroness Louise Casey told the BBC she was 'disappointed' by the Opposition's response to her review of the grooming gangs scandal.
She said: 'We need to change some laws, we need to do a national criminal investigation, we need to get on with a national inquiry with local footprint in it and ideally wouldn't it be great if everybody came behind that and backed you?'
'I felt the Opposition could have just been a bit, you know, yes we will all come together behind you.
'Maybe there's still time to do that. I think it's just so important that they do.'
Shadow home secretary Mr Philp said the Conservatives wanted the inquiry to take two years, focus on 'all 50 towns affected' and 'look at the role of ethnicity in the cover-up'.
But appearing in front of the Commons Home Affairs Committee on Tuesday morning, Baroness Casey urged people to 'keep calm' on the subject of ethnicity.
Baroness Casey's report, published on Monday, found the ethnicity of perpetrators had been 'shied away from', with data not recorded for two-thirds of offenders.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper told MPs that officials had dodged the issue for fear of being called racist, and called for 'much more robust national data'.
Sir Keir, on Saturday, announced plans to launch a national statutory inquiry into the scandal after accepting the recommendation made in Baroness Casey's Government-commissioned review.
The Tories have since accused him of U-turning on the issue after the Government resisted pressure from political opponents for months to implement the measure.
Ministers had not ruled out a statutory probe, but previously said their focus was on ensuring the outstanding recommendations of an earlier national inquiry by Professor Alexis Jay had been put in place.
Baroness Casey has said that a national inquiry should be done within three years, rather than the two called for by the Conservatives.
She believed three years would be 'achievable' to carry out the national and local inquiries.
The crossbench peer also urged local areas to 'think carefully' about not being open to scrutiny and to change.
On the five local inquiries announced in January, she said 'only Oldham bit the bullet', adding: 'My understanding is nobody else volunteered for that. So that tells you something, doesn't it? It tells you something, and it doesn't tell you something I certainly would want to hear if I was a victim.'
Safeguarding minister Jess Phillips also told the Home Affairs Committee on Tuesday 'I don't want to hang about' over implementing Baroness Casey's 12 recommendations and that a figure is being worked up on how much it will cost to carry out the changes.
She also said a national inquiry will not delay reforms from being introduced.
'I will not wait and, and I have to say the department hasn't waited for findings of an inquiry to be getting on with the work that needs doing,' she said.
'Whether that's…the task force that leads on this, whether that's other interventions that we fund in the policing space, or the support space, that those things all go on.'
A Downing Street spokesman said the format and chairperson of the inquiry would be set out at a later date, adding that it would have the power to compel people to give evidence.
He added that the Government had accepted all of Baroness Casey's recommendations, including making it mandatory for the police to collect data on the ethnicity of suspects.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meeting to discuss drug dealing and traffic issues in this part of Bolton
Meeting to discuss drug dealing and traffic issues in this part of Bolton

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Meeting to discuss drug dealing and traffic issues in this part of Bolton

Police officers will be holding a community meeting tomorrow (Thursday, June 19) to speak about concerns local residents may have. The meeting will take place at Bolton Muslim Girls School on Swan Lane. Issues being discussed will include anti-social behaviour, traffic offences and drug dealing - and how they are being tackled in the community. READ MORE: Bolton women call for action on tackling drugs in the area Officers at Ladybridge meeting raise concerns over knives A spokesman for GMP Bolton Rumworth Neighbourhood Team said: "We will be meeting at 5pm and hope to see all different members of our community there to ask questions, listen to the work we have completed and to meet our team." Police regularly hold meetings - often with council representatives - in the community to hear about local concerns and also the work officers have been doing to tackle crime in the area. Meetings and more information can be found on GMP Bolton Facebook Page.

'I was fined for spending six hours in a car park - I was only there 20 minutes!'
'I was fined for spending six hours in a car park - I was only there 20 minutes!'

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'I was fined for spending six hours in a car park - I was only there 20 minutes!'

A DRIVER has blasted a 'disgusting' fine which claimed he had parked for six hours in a car park - when he had been there for just 20 minutes. Sam Surridge, of Worboys Road, St Johns, was shocked and confused to receive a letter from Euro Car Parks stating he had exceeded the maximum stay at Tybridge Retail Park by several hours and had to pay £100. The 61-year-old said: "They sent a picture of my van leaving the car park which they say was taken at 4.13pm, but it can't be because my van was in my driveway from 10.45am and throughout the afternoon. "They said I was there for five hours and 53 minutes when I couldn't have been there for any more than 20 minutes. "There is no way that photo could have been taken when they say it was taken." Tybridge Retail Park's car park gives visitors up to two hours of free parking. Mr Surridge's Ring doorbell caught him leaving his home at around 10am on Saturday, May 31, before returning at 10.45am, meaning he would have been in the retail park for no more than 45 minutes. Now, he is using his doorbell footage in an attempt to have the parking fine cancelled. "I have appealed my fine and sent them evidence that my van was on my driveway all day," he said. "But the worrying part is what if I did not have a Ring doorbell which captured when I left and came home? "I'm just concerned it will happen to other people." More: More: More: Euro Car Park, the company that issued Mr Surridge's fine, offers a reduced parking charge of £60 if the fine is paid within two weeks being issued. However, it took almost two weeks before he received the notice, giving him just three days to pay or appeal before the fine becomes £100. "I think it is disgusting," Mr Surridge said. "This is either a system error or it is fraud." Euro Car Park has been contacted by Worcester News for a comment but had not responded by the time we went to press.

Canada, India agree to re-establish high commissioners after G7 meeting
Canada, India agree to re-establish high commissioners after G7 meeting

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Canada, India agree to re-establish high commissioners after G7 meeting

In a sign that Canada-India relations are defrosting, the two countries have agreed to reinstate their high commissioners and are eyeing renewed visa services to each other's citizens and businesses. Prime Minister Mark Carney announced the move following his bilateral meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the G7 summit in Alberta. The two countries expelled each other's high commissioners, senior diplomats who are similar to ambassadors, last fall after the RCMP accused the Indian government of playing a role in a network of violence in Canada, including homicides and extortion. Then prime minister Justin Trudeau, backed by security officials, alleged Indian diplomats were collecting information about Canadians and passing it on to organized crime members to attack Canadians. Trudeau also said two years ago that Canada had evidence linking Indian agents to the 2023 killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar in B.C. According to the prime minister's readout, Carney raised priorities on the G7 agenda, "including transnational crime and repression, security and the rules-based order" with Modi. Asked by a journalist what he said to Modi about Nijjar's murder on Canadian soil, Carney did not directly answer. "We have had a discussion, the prime minister and I, about the importance of having the law enforcement-to-law enforcement dialogue, not just dialogue, but co-operation," he said during Tuesday's closing news conference, adding that he also talked about the importance of addressing transnational repression. "Obviously there is a judicial process underway and I need to be careful about further commentary." The two leaders also discussed "significant commercial links," including supply chains and energy, said the statement.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store