Starmer’s Grooming Gangs Cover-Up

Starmer’s Grooming Gangs Cover-Up

Two-Tier Keir isn’t only the most unpopular Prime Minister in British history, he is also the man who did more than anybody else to condemn hundreds of thousands of very young girls to years of abuse, rape, intimidation, violence and even death, at the hands of the grooming gangs.

Everyone knows who and what they were, and the fuss over block voting in the Gorton and Denton by-election reminds us of one of the main reasons why Labour were so desperate to cover it all up – to avoid “offending” the block vote which has for decades handed them so many seats.

But the role of Starmer personally is still only dimly understood – which is what makes this Daily Express investigation so important. And it makes it even more important that YOU restack this, and share the link to this Substack post all over social media.

The grooming and rape threat is still out there, and every new boatload which the Starmer gang lets in makes it worse. But the good news is that the incidence of grooming by the former “usual suspects” has been in sharp decline for several years now.

Why? A number of reasons:

  1. Public awareness has finally forced the police to be willing to take action;
  2. The authorities understand that public anger is now so strong that repeating their previous efforts to sweep it all under the carpet could lead to a devastating explosion of popular outrage;
  3. All the publicity about the scandal means that families and potential victims are now massively better informed than they were when the grooming was at its worst. Far fewer girls are getting taken in by the “boyfriend” trick or offers of cigarettes, swigs of vodka and ‘presents’;
  4. Increased security and vigilance outside schools – by teachers and parents alike – has made the old ploy of approaching girls outside the school gates very much more dangerous, and hence increasingly unusual;
  5. Historic cases keep coming through the courts and hitting the headlines, so would-be perpetrators know that they could be caught and brought to justice, with potential stiff sentences. These girls are no longer “free meat”. Those born and brought up here know the risks, so it’s mainly now newcomers who think they can get away with preying on our girls, and – despite the taxi ferry service between France and Dover – there are fewer of them;
  6. While many of the old perpetrators have still not been brought to justice, so many have that it has brought widespread shame on their community. Decent Muslims are horrified by this on moral grounds; others just worry that it’s VERY bad for business. Whether you’re selling curries, kebabs, market-stall clothes or minicab rides, having your community seen as nonces costs customers and money. So young men who are part of the community are now under pressure to behave;
  7. Twenty or thirty years ago, grooming gangs could approach potential victims and know that they could just melt back into the shadows if it didn’t work out as they wanted. But, in 2026, every schoolgirl, and all her friends, has a mobile phone with top quality camera. Video recordings go viral at the press of a button. Car number plates and faces are captured and shared in the blink of an eye.
  8. The mood of the indigenous minority has changed drastically. There’s a militancy and awareness in the air, totally different to the passive apathy of two or three decades ago. Our community is no longer prepared to be victimised, and potential perpetrators with any links to or business with us know it. Hence, again, why its the newly arrived, single men in HMOs and hotels who now make up so many of the grooming and outright sexual assault cases still going on.
  9. Their community is changing too. Thirty years ago, well under 10% of their young men went to university. Now it’s around 40%. That means a much smaller proportion who might be tempted to hang around on the edge of their ghettos looking for young white girls to pick up and gang rape. Lads with professional middle-class ambitions just don’t do that. That doesn’t help if you think that, for example, our legal system should be mainly run by people like us, but it does help to make our streets just a little bit less dangerous for our girls.

All in all, the slow turn-around is a vindication of the efforts of the BNP who started to raise awareness of the scandal 22 years ago, and ran with the issue for years before others got on board. Hat tip to all of them too, because if nothing had been said and done, the grooming scandal would STILL be as bad as it was back then. Together, we made a difference, just as right actions can always make a difference.

Returning to the Express documentary, do also watch the second half, below. It’s devastating stuff. Even if you don’t have time to watch it now, please do RESTACK and SHARE this post all over. Right now. Most of the reasons things are getting better boil down to public awareness.

Every extra boost to that awareness – of the issue and of Starmer’s guilt – therefore helps speed the day when the grooming gangs really do become a bad chapter in history, rather than a present threat. And the end of Starmer and his evil regime!

https://nickgriffin544956.substack.com/p/starmers-grooming-gangs-cover-up