Badenoch condones Tories forming pacts with Reform UK if necessary to take control of councils – UK politics live

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Cooper says five local grooming gang inquiries still set to go ahead, after Tories claim they’ve been dropped in ‘cover-up’

During her BBC Breakfast interview Kemi Badenoch claimed that the government has dropped the plans for five local inquiries into grooming gang, or child rape scandals, that were announced in January. As she was trying to fend of the questions about Adolescence, she said:

One of the things that I’m more bothered by is the fact that just yesterday, we had Labour telling us that they’re not going to be investigating the rape gang scandal, something which had happened all across the country. That’s real. That’s happening right now. We’re not talking about that.

And, in a subsequent interview with Sky News, she suggested that some sort of cover up was going on. She said:

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I am absolutely astonished that Labour has dropped what it said it would do in January. And, as I said to Keir Starmer at prime minister’s questions, if he did not have a full national inquiry, people will start to think that there is a cover-up.

They are clearly uncomfortable with having inquiries that are looking into this issue.

They said that they will have a pot of money for councils to bid in. But why would a council bid for money to investigate itself?

(Badenoch may have forgotten that the grooming gang inquiry story only became a big media controversy in January after GB News reported that the government had rejected a request from Oldham council for a public inquiry into the grooming gang scandal in the town in the past.)

Other Tories have also claimed Starmer is engaged in a cover-up. Andrew Griffith, the shadow business secretary, posed this on social media last night.

As a rule I believe in mess ups rather than conspiracy.

But if true that Labour have shelved even the most limited public enquiries into grooming gangs, it does suggest that powerful Labour politicians have something to hide.

Why not seek the truth?

The Conservatives have been claiming that the five local rape gang inquiries have been dropped on the basis of what Jess Phillips, the safeguarding minister, told MPs in a statement on Tuesday. Phillips did not say the inquiries were being dropped. But she could not report any progress being made towards setting them up, and she set out what sounded like a lengthy process that might lead to inquiries turning into victims’ panels. She said:

We are developing a new best practice framework to support local authorities that want to undertake victim-centred local inquiries or related work, drawing on the lessons from local independent inquiries such as those in Telford, Rotherham and Greater Manchester. We will publish the details next month.

Alongside that, we will set out the process through which local authorities can access the £5m national fund to support locally-led work on grooming gangs. Following feedback from local authorities, the fund will adopt a flexible approach to support both full independent local inquiries and more bespoke work, including local victims’ panels or locally led audits of the handling of historical cases.

Today, in an interview with LBC, Yvette Cooper rejected claims that plans for the local inquiries were being watered down. She said:

There’s a huge information about this. This is completely wrong. We’re actually increasing, not reducing, the action being taken on this.

Child sexual exploitation, grooming gangs – these are some of the most vile crimes, things like rape or exploitation, coercion. We’re increasing the action against that.

So we’ve already set out one local inquiry – that will be in Oldham. We’re drawing up the framework at the moment for the further local inquiries. We’ve got the Louise Casey audit that’s underway at the moment.

Asked if the five local inquiries promised in January would go ahead, she replied: “Yes, there may be more.”

Even though some of the worst grooming gangs scandals were happening up to 20 years ago, and even thought there have been multiple prosecutions and inquiries into these crimes over the past decade or more, the Conservatives and Reform UK are picking up significant public and media support with their argument that the full truth is being withheld and further inquiries are needed.

According to Sky News, Phillips plans to hold a briefing for Labour MPs worried about this issue at 5pm this afternoon.

Yvette Cooper on Sky News this morning Photograph: Sky News
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Badenoch defends not planning to watch Adolescence, saying ‘my job is not to watch lots of TV’

Kemi Badenoch is often quite a tetchy interviewee, and on BBC Breakfast this morning things got a bit awkward when the presenters, Naga Munchetty and Charlie Steyt, asked her if she had watched the Netflix TV drama Adolescence yet.

In a previous interview earlier this month, asked about the series, Badenoch got into trouble because she ended up spouting a conspiracy theory. She did not do that today, but she did say she still has not watched the show, adding: “I probably won’t.”

When Munchetty suggested she should, because “everyone is talking about it” and it was prompting conversations about masculinity, smartphone use and misogyny, Badenoch replied:

I think that those are all important issues, and those were issues that I’ve been talking about for a long time.

But in the same way that I don’t need to watch Casualty to know what’s going on in the NHS, I don’t need to watch a specific Netflix drama to understand what’s going on. It’s a fictional series. It is not a documentary.

Munchetty and Steyt persisted, suggesting that Badenoch should watch the story, and for some reason Steyt was particularly bothered by her comparing Adolescence to Casualty. Did she really mean that? Badenoch replied:

I’m saying very clearly that my job is not to watch lots of TV. My job is to get out there and make sure that I’m talking about the issues that are happening in the country right now.

Other journalists are more sympathetic. This is what Duncan Robinson, political editor of the Economist, said about this on social media.

Badenoch in the right. Stop basing public policy on telly

Kemi Badenoch on BBC Breakfast this morning Photograph: BBC
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source: theguardian.com


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