Sadiq Khan seals his fate as denial of London rape gangs hands Donald Trump the sweetest revenge - Lee Cohen

Susan Hall hits out at Sadiq Khan's 'absolutely diabolical' grooming gangs 'cover up' |

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Lee Cohen

By Lee Cohen


Published: 30/10/2025

- 14:57

Updated: 30/10/2025

- 14:57

President Trump has been right all along about the London Mayor, writes US columnist Lee Cohen

With the horrific news reaching America of the appalling allegation that Sadiq Khan denies the presence of grooming gangs within the British capital, it is striking how right President Trump has been all along about the London Mayor.

The fog of denial over London is lifting, and the reality is unbelievable to Britain’s greatest ally: revelations that the city’s disaster mayor likely concealed evidence of grooming gangs preying on British children — rapes in hotels, threats to silence victims —now exposed by the Metropolitan Police’s review of 9,000 historical cases.


This alleged cover-up unmasks a catastrophic failure, validating Trump’s unvarnished truth-telling.

From across the Atlantic, the truth could not be more stark: the possibility that Khan has traded the safety of British kids for a diversity madness defies reason.

This alleged betrayal wounds our shared bond, and the path forward demands clarity and accountability.

Donald Trump (left), Sadiq Khan (right)

Sadiq Khan seals his fate as denial of London rape gangs hands Donald Trump the sweetest revenge - Lee Cohen

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The echoes of Rotherham, where 1,400 girls suffered unchecked abuse from 1997 to 2013 due to institutional cowardice, now resound in Londons diverse streets.

Khan, allegedly aware of the grooming atrocities through 2022 reports, stands accused of denying their scale, his silence a betrayal of the British values — justice, decency, and child protection.

Yet the rot extends to the Labour Party, which sacrifices the safety and welfare of ordinary Britons to uphold the narrative that diversity is a strength.

This ideological fixation has enabled predators, with Khan as the public face and Labour as the enabler, to trade British kids for a hollow ideal.

The Met’s review, driven by public outrage, exposes this failure, eroding trust in a city once synonymous with strength. This decline is abhorrent, seeing a leadership blinded by dogma at the expense of its children.

As always, Trumps prescience stands out, his prophetic jabs piercing the polite silence of Britain’s elite.

Hes called Khan a “terrible, terrible mayor”, a “national disgrace” destroying London, and a “stone-cold loser” akin to New York’s floundering de Blasio.

In a 2019 UN speech, he warned of cultural erosion, suggesting Khan’s Sharia law push— reflective of his alarm at London’s drift.

His tweets demanded a new mayor, spotlighting rising crime and urging Khan to prioritise safety.

Trump’s bluntness mirrors what many Britons sense but hesitate to voice: Khan’s tenure, backed by Labour’s diversity obsession, is a disaster for Britain, our key ally.

His willingness to speak the unspoken truths, proven right by this scandal, unmasks how this madness trades British kids for ideological gain—a reality that settles unbearably.

Khan’s and his Labour Party record cements the catastrophe. Office for National Statistics data shows a 75 per cent surge in sexual offences since 2016, though Full Fact notes this mirrors national trends, weakening a direct link to Khan alone.

Still, economic stagnation and cultural erosion dim London’s imperial glow.

The grooming gang denial paints this narrative fully — Khan as the disaster mayor, Labour as the architect, both trading British kids for a diversity narrative that breeds chaos.

Globally, from Trump to international leaders, this is seen as a liability, straining our alliance.

This scandal is a disgraceful revelation: British kids allegedly sacrificed to a diversity madness that Labour champions and Khan embodies.

Trump’s spot-on assessment contrasts sharply with Westminster’s excuses. This betrayal, where safety is bartered for ideology, is reprehensible. The Met’s review of 9,000 cases and rising crime indicates a leadership unfit to lead, but ousting Khan faces hurdles.

Legally, the Greater London Authority Act 1999 allows recall only with a conviction or formal breach—neither exists as of October 29, 2025.

Politically, Labour’s 57 per cent London support (YouGov, 2025) and the 2028 election timeline limit immediate action.

Yet, feasibility lies in demanding transparency: push for an independent inquiry to uncover evidence, press the London Assembly for scrutiny, and rally public pressure to shift the narrative.

This could lay the groundwork for accountability, though it’s a long road — not a quick fix.

Honouring your children with justice requires more than outrage. Replace this disaster mayor when the ballot allows in 2028 and reconsider a party that trades their future for votes.

From American shores, I see a Britain still capable of reclaiming its pride, free from Khan’s grip. Political winds favouring Reform UK bear this out.

The evidence—Met reviews, crime stats—demands action, but it must be strategic: demand investigations, amplify the truth, and prepare for the next election.

Once again, Trump nailed it. He is Britain’s greatest champion ever in the White House, urging a return to the strength that once united us as allies.

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