By ELIZABETH HAIGH
Published: 10:59 GMT, 8 January 2025 | Updated: 12:13 GMT, 8 January 2025
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Sir Keir Starmer will today come face to face with Kemi Badenoch for the first time following a row over grooming gangs which has resulted in a blizzard of attacks on the UK government by Elon Musk.
The Prime Minister heads to his first PMQs of the year amid a bitter war of words with the Conservative leader whom he accused of deploying a ‘shocking tactic’ as she attempts to garner support in the Commons for a new inquiry.
It comes as Mr Musk, the Tesla billionaire and key ally of President-elect Donald Trump claimed Sir Keir was ‘complicit’ in allowing grooming gangs’ activities to continue unchecked and should be in ‘prison’.
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‘Reasonable’ people will not agree on an inquiry, Starmer says
‘Reasonable people can agree or disagree’ on whether a further inquiry into child sexual exploitation is needed, the Prime Minister has told MPs.
Opening Prime Minister’s Questions in the Commons Labour MP Neil Coyle (Bermondsey and Old Southwark) asked: ‘Last July, the public overwhelmingly backed Labour’s manifesto commitment to halving violence against women and girls.
‘Can the Prime Minister set out how today’s vote on the Children’s Wellbeing Bill is a crucial step to delivering that promise to protecting children and without the delay of an unnecessary further lengthy inquiry?’
Sir Keir Starmer replied: ‘Violence against women and girls, abuse, child sexual exploitation are sickening. Many victims have been let down for a very long time by warped ideas about community relations and the protection of institutions.
‘(Mr Coyle) raises the question of inquiries. There have been a number of inquiries, both national and local, including one covering Oldham, and reasonable people can agree or disagree on whether a further inquiry is necessary.’
National inquiry would take too long, Starmer claims
Starmer tells the House the focus must remain on victims and survivors, and pointed out that the last CSE inquiry took seven years.
He said this is far too long and means a new inquiry wouldn’t conclude until 2031.
‘The victims I have spoken to want action today,’ he said.
Badenoch ‘jumping on the bandwagon’
Starmer accuses Badenoch of never raising the issue of grooming gangs while she was in government, including as Children’s Minister.
Shouts of ‘shame’ were heard in the Chamber as Starmer goaded Badenoch, offering to withdraw his comments if she had raised the grooming gangs scandal, accusing her of ‘jumping on the bandwagon’.
Badenoch did not explicitly deny his claims but said she had supported victims in the past.
Badenoch hits back
Badenoch hits back at Starmer saying the last government accepted 18 of the reccommendations in the Jay review and pointed out they had set up a unit to target exploitation gangs.
She quotes a survivor of sexual abuse from Telford and reiterates her call for a national inquiry.
Starmer responds by saying the Conservatives didn’t put any of the reccommendations into force, and said he first called for the mandatory reporting of child sex abuse more than a decade ago.
First question from Badenoch on grooming gangs
Kemi Badenoch asks if Starmer is confidant if the extent of grooming gangs in the UK is known.
The Prime Minister reiterates that there was a national inquiry into child sex abuse, which did include looking at gangs, and accused the Conservatives of failing to instigate any of the 20 reccommendations made.
Starmer added it is ‘unacceptable’ for the Conservatives to try and ‘vote down’ a bill which seeks to ‘protect children’.
PMQs gets underway
PMQs has got underway and Tory leader Kemi Badenoch opens by offering Sir Keir Starmer condolences for the loss of his brother during the festive period.
Politicians accused of ‘exploiting’ grooming gang victims
Andrew Norfolk, the journalist who first exposed Rotherham’s grooming gangs, has accused politicians of ‘exploiting’ child sexual abuse victims.
Speaking to podcast The News Agents, he said victims are ‘being exploited all over again’ by politicians, adding: ‘For now politicians to jump on the bandwagon when they’ve been silent for so many years, just strikes me as a bit shameful.’
He also said Elon Musk’s posts are an ‘utter distortion of the truth’.
Labour minister Jess Phillips tonight hit back at Elon Musk for branding her a ‘rape genocide apologist’ amid the furious political row over grooming gangs.
The controversial billionaire has recently launched a barrage of attacks on senior Labour figures – including Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer – over the issue.
In posts on his X social media site, the businessman has attacked Sir Keir’s record on tackling grooming gangs from his time as the director of public prosecutions.
He also blasted Ms Phillips for rejecting a request for the Government to lead a public inquiry into child sexual exploitation in Oldham.
But, in a series of TV interviews this evening, the Home Office minister branded Mr Musk’s posts ‘ridiculous’ and claimed he ‘knows absolutely nothing’ about the subject.
Badenoch demands ‘justice’ for grooming gang victims ahead of crucial vote
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has said that the ‘public demand answers’ over grooming gangs.
In a video posted on X, Mrs Badenoch said: ‘The public demand answers, the victims deserve justice.’
She also accused the Government of ‘trying to sweep it under the rug’.
The clip comes as the Tories will seek to garner support for a new nationwide investigation into child grooming as they try to force a vote in the Commons on Wednesday.
PM leaves 10 Downing Street ahead of PMQs
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has just been pictured leaving No.10 ahead of today’s PMQs.
He’ll do some final preparation at Parliament before joining the rest of his MPs in the Commons shortly.
The PM has ordered his MPs to oppose an amendment tabled by Kemi Badenoch that would trigger a new official probe.
With Labour holding a massive majority in the House, it means the bid is almost certain to fail.
Sir Keir – who has been fending off an extraordinary social media attack on the issue from US billionaire Elon Musk – accused the Conservatives of ‘shocking’ tactics by tagging the measure on to the wider Children’s Wellbeing & Schools Bill.
‘I would implore any right-thinking Tory MP to vote for the Bill because this would kill the Bill, this would kill the legislation,’ he told the Mirror.
Analysis: Starmer returns to maelstrom on grooming gangs, JAMES TAPSFIELD writes
Keir Starmer might have been hoping for a low-key return to politics after Christmas and New Year.
But his short family break to Madeira – in itself delayed due to the death of his brother – must already feel like it was months ago.
The PM has walked into a maelstrom on grooming gangs thanks to the intervention of the world’s richest man, Elon Musk.
The US mogul has been using his X social media platform to fuel fury at the handling of the scandal, which first emerged more than a decade ago. Branding Sir Keir ‘evil’ and saying he should go to prison for his record as a former director of public prosecutions are among the more repeatable jibes being thrown.
It leaves Sir Keir walking a particularly tricky tightrope, as Mr Musk is one of Donald Trump’s closest confederates – and the PM is desperate to foster relations with the returning president.
Allies have long viewed the premier’s performance as DPP, including the reforms he introduced to target grooming gangs, as a matter of pride.
It will be galling for him to see his record trashed online, and ministers are visibly furious at the way the Tories have moved to exploit calls for a new national inquiry – something they did not pursue while in power.
However, politics is a rough game.
Labour is trying to hold firm and paint Kemi Badenoch as an opportunist.
No10 will hope the focus from across the Atlantic will soon shift, not least as Mr Trump resumes ownership of the White House this month.
The danger is that much damage has already been done – and after the Commons showdown this evening, the Conservatives will gain a potent attack line: that Labour voted to block an inquiry into grooming gangs.
Education Secretary accuses Tories of wanting to kill child protection bill ‘stone dead’
Speaking ahead of today’s PMQs, Education Secretary defended her party’s stance on a grooming inquiry.
She told Times Radio: ‘We are looking right across the recommendations that Alexis Jay set out and there are crucial recommendations from the review that she carried out.
‘That’s why today we are setting out legislation that addresses many of the wider challenges that we see right across our system. It’s why the Home Secretary announced in the House of Commons the action that we are taking.
‘So we are wasting no time in legislating to keep children safe. The question for the Conservatives today is why they are intent on blocking this landmark piece of child protection legislation that would keep the very children safe that they claim they are concerned about.’
She added: ‘They come along today as we set out legislation to protect the very children they claim to care about and they intend to block it and kill it stone dead.
‘It is absolutely sickening.’
Who is asking questions today?
As ever, after questions from the leader of the opposition, Prime Minister Starmer will also respond to questions from MPs across the House.
Today that includes Lib Dem MP Marie Goldman, Labour MP Alex Baker and Green MP Carla Denyer.
Victoria Collins, Sam Joseph and Josh Newbury are also amongst those expected to speak today.
The family of a murdered teenage girl who was Britain’s first white honour killing victim have condemned a grooming gangs ‘cover-up’ and backed calls for a new national inquiry into the scandal.
An inquiry held after her murder by Ashtiaq Ashgar, who could soon be eligible for parole, criticised officials at Rotherham Council after hearing how she was preyed upon by gangs in the town from the age of just 11.
Laura was killed just days after she revealed to families of some of her abusers how she had been in sexual relationships with them – including having a daughter by an older man who was described as a ‘mentor’ to her murderer.
Now her elder sister Sarah Wilson, 33, has backed calls for a new national inquiry into sex abuse gangs, following on from concerns raised by X owner Elon Musk.
Elon Musk accused of spreading ‘misinformation’
The government and Sir Keir Starmer have accused Elon Musk of spreading misinformation about the reality of grooming gangs in recent days.
Musk caused controversy when he appeared to cross a line and accused Home Office minister Jess Phillips of being a ‘rape genocide apologist’ after she refused calls for a national inquiry.
Ms Phillips instead recommended a local inquiry, as happened in other towns such as Telford.
Musk has since been accused of peddling far-right lies on X, formerly Twitter, by Starmer.
Starmer hits out at Badenoch over ‘shocking tactic’
Sir Keir Starmer has accused the Conservatives of prioritising winning support on Elon Musk’s social media site over protecting children by pushing for a vote on a new nationwide child grooming investigation.
The Prime Minister said Tory leader Kemi Badenoch’s attempt to win parliamentary backing for a new inquiry was a ‘shocking tactic’ because it would mean derailing legislation aimed at bolstering the safety of children.
Sir Keir told the Mirror: ‘No MP should be voting down children’s safeguarding measures. It’s shocking they are even thinking about this as a tactic.
‘It’s the elevation of the desire for retweets over any real interest in the safeguarding of children.’
A fiery PMQs: What to expect
Today’s PMQs is sure to be a feisty even amid the ongoing rows over Elon Musk, grooming gangs and Reform.
The shocking abuse of thousands of young girls by gangs across the country – including in Rochdale, Telford and Oldham – was put back on the national agenda by Musk recently as he made controversial comments about Labour MP Jess Phillips.
Reform are calling for a national inquiry into grooming gangs and say they intend to fund one themselves if the government refuses.
Meanwhile the Conservatives are threatening to table an amendment which could derail the to the Government’s Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill to explicitly require a national inquiry into the scandal.
If successful, this would halt the progress of the Bill completely.
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Politics LIVE: Keir Starmer to face Kemi Badenoch at PMQs after Elon Musk’s grooming gangs attack