Richard Tice demands apology from Yvette Cooper over 'far-right' rape gangs 'smear'
Richard Tice demands apology to those 'smeared' for calling for a national inquiry into grooming gangs
GB NEWS
Stay up-to-date with all the latest political coverage from GB News below
Additional reporting by Lewis Henderson
Reform UK deputy leader Richard Tice has requested an apology from Home Secretary Yvette Cooper after initial demands for a national grooming gangs inquiry were dismissed by Sir Keir Starmer as "far-right" and "misinformed".
Speaking in the House of Commons after Cooper's announcement, Tice asked the Home Secretary: "Will she now apologise on behalf of the Prime Minister who smeared and labelled those of us who called for a national inquiry?"
Despite Tice's question, Cooper appeared to look past issuing any potential apology.
She told the Boston & Skegness MP: "I do believe that victims and survivors are owed an apology for that failure over very many years."
Baroness Louise Casey has revealed her reasoning for demanding a national inquiry into grooming gangs.
Casey highlighted the failures of addressing the cases both historically and in the present.
She said: "There may be victims out there that haven't had justice that I think we should double back and do something about."
Labour has lost its majority on the Cheshire West and Chester council following the resignations of two councillors.
Councillor Elizabeth MacGlashan and Jimmy Shannon both felt that "they did not recognise" the Labour party anymore.
Labour now has 35 out of 70 seats on the council, leaving it with no overall control.
Donald Trump is set to sign a proclamation finalising the US-UK trade deal
REUTERS
US President Donald Trump is set to sign a proclamation finalising the US-UK trade deal which was agreed last month.
Sources close to the matter report work on the proclamation has been completed, however it was not clear whether Trump would sign the deal when he met Sir Keir Starmer at the G7 summit.
Trump said last month the deal will "cement the relationship" between the UK and the US.
The President praised the UK, stating it was a "great honour" to confirm Britain as the first nation to do a deal with his administration.
The review into the rape gangs scandal admits there has been a "denial" with collecting the ethnicity of those involved, creating a significant "risk", according to Baroness Louise Casey.
Casey, who led the review, stated it has created "as much of a problem as collecting" the data.
Casey laid out a series of recommendations in her review, all of which have been accepted by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper.
The Baroness explained that not collecting the data "does no one in the Muslim and Pakistani community a service".
Independent MP Rupert Lowe has called for an American judge to oversee the national inquiry into grooming gangs.
He claimed that the British authorities "ultimately end up marking their own homework" and added how "rarely they actually find any blame".
Lowe's comments follow Labour's decision for a national inquiry into grooming gangs.
The poll said 87 per cent support the inquiry
YouGov
A YouGov poll stated that 87 per cent of the British public support a national inquiry into the sexual abuse and rape of children by grooming gangs.
It noted that 68 per cent strongly support the inquiry, with only three per cent opposing the national inquiry.
Yvette Cooper announced today that there will be a national inquiry, having accepted a dozen recommendations from Baroness Louise Casey's review.
Kemi Badenoch has demanded that Sir Keir Starmer's national inquiry targets grooming scandal "hot spots", including Bradford and Rochdale.
The Leader of the Opposition said: "This inquiry must have teeth. It must start with known hot spots like Bradford and Rochdale.
“We need clear commitments, for example, will the inquiry examine the role of ethnicity in these crimes, confronting hard truths about potential cover-ups motivated by fears of appearing racist? There’s no point them (Labour MPs) muttering, the Home Secretary said it herself.”
Badenoch added: “The Prime Minister has waited months for someone to take this decision for him. This is the kind of dithering and delay that the survivors complained about.
“We need answers to the following questions. The House deserves to know, what changed the Prime Minister’s mind, from thinking this was dog whistle far-right politics, to something he must do? When exactly did Baroness Casey submit her findings to Downing Street, and did the Government request any changes to her report?
“Does she agree that anyone in authority who deliberately covered up these disgusting crimes should be prosecuted for misconduct in public office, and those prosecutions should happen alongside, not after, the inquiry?”
Kemi Badenoch has launched a scathing attack against Sir Keir Starmer after the Prime Minister declined to apologise for changing his mind on launching a national grooming gangs inquiry.
In a fiery exchange with Yvette Cooper in the House of Commons, Badenoch said: “After months of pressure the Prime Minister has finally accepted our calls for a full statutory national inquiry into the grooming gangs.
“I welcome that we have finally reached this point. This is a victory for the survivors who have been calling for this for years.”
She added: “The Prime Minister’s handling of this scandal is an extraordinary failure of leadership.
“His judgement has once again been found wanting… he accused those of us demanding justice for the victims of this scandal as ‘jumping on a far-right bandwagon’.”
Badenoch also took aim at Labour MPs for voting three times against efforts to force a national grooming gangs inquiry.
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch has delivered a damning five-word verdict on Yvette Cooper's grooming gangs announcement.
Following Cooper's update to MPs in the House of Commons, the Leader of the Opposition said: "I couldn't believe my ears listening to the Home Secretary's statement as if this was their plan all along, when we all know this is another U-turn."
Yvette Cooper has vowed to exclude any sex offenders from the asylum system following Baroness Casey's review into rape gangs.
The Home Secretary said Sir Keir Starmer's Government is "bringing forward a change to the law" to ensure that "anyone convicted of sexual offences is excluded from the asylum system and denied refugee status".
Yvette Cooper has confirmed Baroness Casey has identified a clear "over-representation" of Asian and Pakistani men in her rape gangs review.
Speaking in the House of Commons, the Home Secretary said: "[Casey] has found continued failure to gather proper, robust national data, despite concerns being raised going back very many years.
"In the local data that the audit examined from three police forces, they identified clear evidence of over-representation among suspects of Asian and Pakistani heritage men, and she refers to examples of organisations avoiding the topic altogether for fear of appearing racist or raising community tensions."
Yvette Cooper
PARLIAMENT
The Home Secretary has confirmed Sir Keir Starmer's Government will launch a inquiry which sees a national commission oversee further local investigations.
Yvette Cooper said that Baroness Casey's report “concludes that further local investigations are needed but that they should be directed and overseen by a national commission with statutory inquiry powers.”
She added: “We agree. And we will set up a national inquiry to that effect.”
Yvette Cooper has revealed more than 800 rape gang cases were uncovered in Baroness Casey's "damning" review.
The Home Secretary admitted that the number could rise above 1,000, adding: "Children as young as ten plied with drugs and alcohol, brutally raped by gangs of men [had been] disgracefully let down again and again by the authorities who were meant to protect them and keep them safe."
She also said: "At its heart she identifies a deep-rooted failure to treat children as children.
"A continued failure to protect children and teenage girls from rape, from exploitation, and serious violence."
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has confirmed Labour will accept all 12 of the recommendations made in Baroness Casey's rape gangs review.
Cooper confirmed that Sir Keir Starmer's Government will now introduce:
- New laws to protect children and support victims
- New major police operations
- A national inquiry to direct local probes and hold institutions to account for failures
- New ethnicity data and research
- New action across children's services to identify young people at risk
- Further action to support child victims and tackle new forms of exploitation online
- Change the law to ensure that adults who engage in penetrative sex with a child under the age of 16 will be charged with rape
Yvette Cooper makes Commons announcement on grooming gangs inquiry
PARLIAMENT TV
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper is now making an urgent Commons announcement to confirm a national grooming gangs inquiry.
The Home Secretary, who just last month rejected fresh calls for a nationwide probe, is addressing MPs ahead of the publication of Baroness Casey's review.
Casey's review prompted the Prime Minister to throw his weight behind a national inquiry just six months after Starmer described such calls as "far-right".
Sir Keir Starmer has stood by his claim in January that the Tories were jumping on "far-right" bandwagons by demanding a national grooming gangs inquiry.
Just 48 hours after Starmer announced his national inquiry U-turn, a No10 spokesman said: "The Prime Minister’s comments about bandwagons were specifically about ministers from the previous Government who sat in office for years and did nothing to tackle this scandal.
"As the Prime Minister has said, we will not make the same mistake.
"The point the PM has made is that those spreading lies and misinformation were not doing so in the interest of victims.
"And those cheerleading for Tommy Robinson, who was almost who was jailed for almost collapsing a grooming case, are not interested in justice."
Keir Starmer has been warned he could face a rebellion from as many as 150 Labour MPs over Rachel Reeves's plans to slash benefits by £5billion a year.
The Prime Minister, who is attending the G7 summit in Canada, claimed the welfare system was not “working for taxpayers” just weeks after his Chancellor confirmed Personal Independence Payments (PIP) was one of the benefits being slashed.
In a significant challenge to Starmer's leadership, more than 150 Labour MPs signed a private letter indicating their opposition.
Despite the in-party conflict, the Prime Minister did not suggest that he would be offering concessions to angry Labour backbenchers.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer during a bilateral meeting with Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni at the G7 summit
PA
Sir Keir Starmer's appearance at the G7 summit has been dominated by events in the Middle East after the Prime Minister warned the situation could deteriorate "without warning".
As Iran and Israel continue to launch aerial bombardments on one another, a No10 spokesman said: "We, of course, recognise this is a fast-moving situation that has the potential to deteriorate further, quickly and without warning.
"We are keeping all our advice under constant review and we plan for a variety of developments, as you would expect."
Starmer said that the G7 meeting in Alberta would provide an opportunity for allies to make the case for de-escalation and called for "restraint" during a bilateral meeting with Italian premier Giorgia Meloni in Kananaskis, Canada, on Sunday evening.
Baroness Casey is expected to make 12 recommendations in her grooming gangs report, GB News understands.
The report, released later this afternoon, is expected to include recommendations ordering police forces to improve their collection of ethnicity data in exploitation cases.
Nigel Farage
PA
Kent County Council spent taxpayers’ cash covering TV licence fees for asylum seekers, Reform UK’s Doge chief Zia Yusuf has claimed.
In a bombshell announcement, Yusuf said: “Kent County Council is using taxpayer money to pay for TV licenses for asylum seekers.
“Remember that next time you are asked to pay for yours.”
After Yusuf claimed taxpayers were footing the £174.50 bill per asylum seeker, Reform UK chief whip Lee Anderson said: “You couldn't make this up.”
Yusuf, who quit as Reform UK’s chairman before returning to the fold 48 hours later, is expected to make further announcements over the coming month.
He has already met with council chiefs in Kent and West Northamptonshire, later pledging all Reform-run councils will face a major financial inspection.
Kent is considered to be on the frontline of the ongoing migrant crisis, with thousands of asylum seekers crossing the Channel to reach the Garden of England since 2020.
GB News also recently revealed how Kent County Council had been using taxpayers’ cash to rent office space almost 200 miles away in Brussels.
Reform’s Kent County Council leader Linden Kemkaran later suggested she could look to end taxpayer-funded English lessons for migrants, instead looking at cheaper alternatives such as Duolingo.
Labour Minister Emma Reynolds struggled through a car crash interview this morning after failing to answer basic questions on the £10billion Lower Thames Crossing.
During an interview with LBC, Reynolds was asked where the crossing "starts and lands".
"Well...it's...you'll forgive me, I can't recall the exact landing zones," she said.
"So the crossing you're talking about, you don't know where it is?" LBC host Nick Ferrari replied.
"It's...the Lower Thames Crossing, which has been in planning for many, many years...and it's to enable essentially people to not have to take the Dartford Tunnel which is a huge problem..." Reynolds replied.
The Lower Thames Crossing will connect Tilbury in Essex to Gravesend in Kent.
The Scottish National Party has been accused of wasting taxpayers' cash on a quango that promotes male breast-reduction surgery.
Scottish Tory leader Russell Findlay highlighted the inclusion of This is Remarkable Ltd in the Scottish Government's current directory of public organisations, despite the company being in liquidation since December 2022.
The firm's website features blog posts about rhinoplasty, vaping liquids and male breast-reduction clinics in South Korea, with a listed contact address in Bali.
"I believe the Scottish Government should be focused on cutting waste, reducing waste not reducing the size of moobs," Findlay told the BBC.
He claimed the discovery proved the SNP "do not even know where their money is going" and called the situation "obscene".
This is Remarkable Ltd, formerly known as Investors in People Scotland, rebranded in 2017 before liquidators were appointed in December 2022.
The company has not filed accounts since 2022, with its last financial statements showing turnover had dropped from £2.1million to £1.4million.
Despite its defunct status, the firm appeared in the Scottish Government's most recent directory of public bodies, published on March 27 this year.
GB NEWS
Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp has slammed Sir Keir Starmer after the Prime Minister was forced to make a "humiliating" grooming gangs U-turn.
Speaking to GB News, Philp also disputed claims that Labour is now taking more decisive action than the Tories did whilst in power.
Asked whether Labour is now taking more action than the Tories did, Philp told GB News: "I don't think that's true. I mean, of course, it was the Conservative Home Secretary Theresa May who set up the original Rotherham inquiry.
"Theresa May also set up the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse, which touched on this, amongst other things. It was Sajid Javid, a Conservative Home Secretary who started collecting ethnicity data.
"It was Rishi Sunak, a Conservative Prime Minister, who set up the grooming gangs task force, which in its first year led to 550 arrests. So that's what the last Government did."
Delivering his verdict on Labour's decision to hold a national inquiry, Philp accused Starmer of "not believing" in an inquiry and instead being "forced" into holding one due to mounting pressure.
Philp fumed: "It is a humiliating U-turn for the Government. And of course, the Government isn't doing this because they want to or because they believe in it, they're doing it because they've been forced to.
Baroness Casey’s grooming gangs report is expected call for local inquiries with statutory powers, feeding into an overall national investigation.
The report, which will be released later today, forced Sir Keir Starmer to U-turn on holding a national probe after recommending the go further than the initial local investigations.
Explaining the impact of the change, GB News National Reporter Charlie Peters said: "Baroness Casey's report, we understand, will call for local inquiries with statutory powers to then feed into a national body.
"They can compel witnesses and compel evidence. This has been a major criticism we've heard of local inquiries in previous years.
"Rotherham, Rochdale, Oldham and Telford local reviews were all done basically by people coming forward off their own volition."
There has also been speculation that the review will directly link illegal migration with the exploitation of British girls.
After Sir Keir Starmer completed an almighty U-turn to hold a national rape gangs inquiry, GB News looks at all of the times Labour bigwigs blasted calls to investigate one of Britain’s darkest scandals.
Labour MPs voted in their droves to reject Tory efforts to force an inquiry, with 350 blocking an amendment to the Children’s Wellbeing & Schools Bill.
Even Labour MPs from the towns most impacted by the rape gangs scandal voted against the proposed national inquiry.
Keighley’s Tory MP Robbie Moore heaped pressure on Labour’s Bradford MPs, who voted against or abstained on the amendment, after warning the scale of child sexual abuse in the city could “dwarf that of Rotherham”.
Despite a gaggle of Labour MPs eventually breaking ranks to demand a national probe, not one defied the Prime Minister’s orders by backing the amendment.
However, significant fury has been reserved for the high-profile Labour figures who unequivocally rejected calls for a national grooming gangs inquiry.
GB News presenter Stephen Dixon has grilled Labour Minister Emma Reynolds on Sir Keir Starmer's sudden U-turn on a grooming gang inquiry, claiming they are taking the issue "very seriously".
Speaking to the People's Channel, Reynolds defended Starmer's decision to hold a national inquiry, despite Starmer previously describing supporters of a probe as "far-right".
The Labour Minister argued: "I remember distinctly that at Prime Minister's Questions in January, the Prime Minister rightly said that there were different views on both sides of this debate. And actually victims and their families had different views too.
"But what we did in January is that we asked every police force to reopen investigations. We now have over 800 reopened cases. We've ordered the National Crime Agency to follow those up, so the Prime Minister and the Government as a whole, our priority all along was to and it continues to be to deliver justice for the victims and their families and get to the bottom of what happened."
Sir Keir Starmer has been blasted after being forced to complete a U-turn on holding a national grooming gangs inquiry.
Writing for The Telegraph, Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: “Keir Starmer’s inquiry U-turn is too little, too late. He smeared those, including me, calling for a national inquiry into the rape gangs scandal as ‘far-Right’ and now he’s been forced into a U-turn by the bite we planned next week and the imminent Casey report.
“The NCA announcement is a desperate smokescreen cooked up over the weekend to distract from Labour’s failures.
“Labour spent six months blocking a statutory inquiry. That is six months of delayed justice. Yvette Cooper led the opposition to an inquiry, and now she pretends she thinks it’s a great idea.
"Labour needs to get a grip and put the survivors of these appalling crimes first. We need a proper inquiry with full powers to uncover the truth.”
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper will today announce a full statutory national inquiry into the grooming gangs scandal.
Cooper, who was accused by Reform and the Tories of dragging her feet after initially dismissing calls for a nationwide probe, will confirm Sir Keir Starmer's inquiry following recommendations made by Baroness Louise Casey's 200-page report.
The inquiry will look into whether state agencies failed to do more to protect largely white girls from predominantly Pakistani rape gangs.
Cooper will also announce a nationwide policing operation to track down perpetrators of child abuse.
The National Crime Agency will oversee the operation and work alongside Britain's police forces going forward.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage
GETTY
Reform UK looks poised to complete its first clampdown on diversity, equity and inclusion training, GB News has been told.
Durham County Council, which was swept up by a turquoise tsunami in last month’s Local Elections, is preparing to announce a major change to its councillor training programme in the coming days.
GB News understands that expected alterations include ending the statutory enforcement of DEI training and climate change modules for all 98 Durham County councillors.
Durham County Council leader Andrew Husband, who already welcomed the "positive" decision to rename portfolios to remove references to climate change and equality, told GB News: “These modules do not align with our objectives and having read the small print we can adapt training to satisfy ‘minimum requirements’ whilst staying compliant.”
This Liveblog has now been closed.