Elon Musk: New attack on the British Prime Minister

The Labor government and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who is accused of his role as a prosecutor in the gang-rape scandal, have faced a frontal attack from the main Conservative opposition and Elon Musk.

Tory leader Kemi Badenoch today joined Elon Musk in calling for a fresh inquiry into the UK’s “gang-rape scandal” after the owner of X reignited his row with the prime minister.

Ms. Badenoch and the billionaire Trump adviser attacked Labour’s decision not to support a new inquiry into allegations of child abuse at Oldham.

The owner of X has used the platform his platform gives him to claim that Britain’s prime minister allowed rapist gangs to “exploit young girls without facing justice” when he was England and Wales’ top prosecutor.

He also claimed that Public Protection Minister Jess Phillips was refusing to investigate the gangs because it would go back to when the prime minister was director of public prosecutions between 2008 and 2013.

Musk, who also backed far-right Tommy Robinson today, wrote that Phillips “deserves to be in jail” after refusing requests from Oldham Council to lead a public inquiry into child sexual exploitation in the town.

Ms. Badenoch joined Musk and UK Reform figures including Nigel Farage in weighing in on the social media row, tweeting: “It’s time for a full national inquiry into the gang-rape scandal. There have been trials across the country in recent years, but no one in charge has “connected the dots”. 2025 must be the year when the victims will begin to be vindicated.”

However, Mr. Farage, whose party has been linked to a $100 million donation from Elon Musk, responded: “Words are cheap. The Conservatives have had 14 years in government to launch an inquiry. The establishment has failed the victims of the gangs that sought to seduce young people at every level.”

Last January a report found that young girls had been “left at the mercy” of pedophile gangs in Rochdale for years because of failings by senior police and council officials.

The damning 173-page report covers the period from 2004 to 2013 and outlines multiple failed Manchester Police (GMP) investigations and the local authorities’ apparent indifference to the plight of hundreds of young, mostly white girls from poor backgrounds, who had been identified as potential victims of abuse in Rochdale by Asian men.

Successive police operations were launched, but were under-resourced to deal with the scale of widespread organized exploitation in the area.

The report follows the same authors’ reports on attempted seductions in Manchester and Oldham, which found that authorities had once again failed children, leaving them in the clutches of pedophiles.

Source: www.enikos.gr