Labour Party Accused of Protecting Rape Gangs for Muslim Votes
"The government, the state, who has been, and particularly the Labour Party here, have been complicit in this because it is linked to the block Muslim vote, which effectively through the postal voting system here Labour were able to win large tracts of particularly the inner cities by attracting the Muslim vote."
About this episode
British MP Rupert Lowe joined Patrick Bet-David to discuss his explosive 15-month inquiry into grooming gangs that he claims raped over 250,000 British girls, predominantly by Pakistani Muslim men. The report, which went viral with over 50 million views on X, alleges systematic abuse involving taxis, care homes, and trafficking networks, with some victims as young as 10. Lowe detailed horrific testimony including gang rapes, bestiality, torture with broken bottles, and girls locked in dog cages in vans. Most disturbing were allegations that police not only failed to intervene but actively participated in abuse, with officers attending rape events and returning victims to abusers. Lowe accused Britain's Labour Party of enabling the scandal for decades to secure Muslim bloc votes in inner cities, refusing a statutory inquiry with legal power to compel testimony. He pointed to former Prime Minister Keir Starmer's role as head of Crown Prosecution Service during the abuse period. The conversation expanded to Britain's political crisis, with seven prime ministers in ten years since Brexit, the influence of the Fabian Society on Labour leadership, and what Lowe sees as civilizational decline accelerated by Tony Blair's constitutional changes. He argued the grooming gangs targeted white girls based on Islamic teachings treating non-Muslim women as inferior, citing testimony that perpetrators justified rape as punishment for not obeying Allah. Lowe revealed the inquiry was crowdfunded by 20,000 citizens after Reform UK leader Nigel Farage promised but failed to deliver an investigation, and announced plans to bring private prosecutions against perpetrators and complicit officials in NHS, social services, and police. The episode concluded with discussion of mass deportations, the need for radical reform, and whether fathers have a moral duty to defend their daughters when the state refuses.
Key takeaways
- Lowe's inquiry claims over 250,000 British girls were raped by predominantly Pakistani Muslim grooming gangs in systematic abuse spanning decades.
- Testimony alleges police officers participated in rape events, returned victims to abusers, and sided with perpetrators over victims due to fear of racism accusations.
- Victims described being raped by dogs while men filmed and bet, torture with broken bottles, and being locked in dog cages in vans for trafficking.
- Lowe accused Labour Party of enabling grooming gangs to secure Muslim bloc votes through postal voting in inner cities and blocking statutory inquiry.
- Sikh community successfully stopped gangs targeting their girls through armed male protection, but British fathers faced police obstruction when attempting same.
- Former PM Keir Starmer headed Crown Prosecution Service during abuse period and is member of Fabian Society, whose emblem is wolf in sheep's clothing.
- Inquiry was crowdfunded by 20,000 citizens after Nigel Farage promised but failed to deliver investigation, now planning private prosecutions of perpetrators and officials.