Priti Patel's Stunning Confession: The State Facilitated Industrial-Scale Child Rape

Priti Patel's Stunning Confession: The State Facilitated Industrial-Scale Child Rape

In three minutes and seventeen seconds of a GB News interview that should be front-page news across Britain, former Home Secretary Priti Patel delivered confessions so explosive they amount to the political equivalent of a plea bargain. Yet the silence from our corrupted media establishment is deafening.

What you're about to read isn't hyperbole. It's the documented admission of a former Cabinet minister that the British state systematically covered up and facilitated the industrial-scale rape of children. Her words, not mine.

The Moment Truth Broke Through

When Camilla Tominey pressed Patel about the 2020 Home Office report, the one that preposterously claimed there was no disproportionate Pakistani involvement in grooming gangs, something remarkable happened. The usual political deflection crumbled.

"I think actually in hindsight, absolutely, yes," Patel admitted when asked if she regretted putting her name to that tissue of lies. But this wasn't ordinary political backtracking. This was a former Home Secretary confessing to fronting what she now acknowledges was "fake data."

Think about that. The person responsible for protecting British children from predators now admits she endorsed fabricated evidence that helped those predators escape scrutiny.

"Deep State" Obstruction: Her Words, Not Mine

But Patel went much further. When questioned about whether officials pushed back against her attempts to investigate grooming gangs, her response was unequivocal: "I think, I think absolutely. There's no question about that."

She described how officials in her own department felt "very uncomfortable" with her "line of probing" and questioning. This isn't conspiracy theory territory, this is the former Home Secretary describing systematic obstruction from within the machinery of state.

She threw entire institutions under the bus: social services, health services, the NHS, local councils, and their leaders. All complicit in what she termed "institutional state failure at every single level."

Most damning of all, she began to say the state was "covering up and facilitating" these crimes before the interviewer cut her off. Let that sink in. A former Home Secretary was about to detail how the British state facilitated child rape and the interview moved on.

The Plea Deal

Here's where it gets extraordinary. Patel isn't just admitting failure, she's offering to turn state's evidence. "I'm very happy to participate in the inquiry," she declared, promising to share not just what she knew but "the challenges that I had to put forward in the system and where we weren't getting answers."

This is a former Cabinet minister offering to testify against the very system she was part of. In any functioning democracy, this would trigger immediate parliamentary inquiries and resignations. Instead, we get silence.

The Data That Destroys Their Lies

While Patel claimed she launched investigations into the "characteristics" and "ethnicities" of grooming gang members following that 2020 report, Baroness Casey's 2025 audit exposed the truth. The data is not just absent, it has been deliberately hidden. Where it exists, it shows massive Pakistani overrepresentation, so obvious that officials literally "tippexed" the word "Pakistani" from files.

So where did Patel's supposed investigation go? Into the same black hole as every other attempt to document the ethnic and religious patterns that every police officer, social worker, and court reporter could see with their own eyes.

The Real Reason They Flourished

The truth Patel hints at but won't fully articulate is this: grooming gangs flourished because the political establishment created the space for them to operate. As well as Labour politicians' dependency on bloc votes delivered by Pakistani cartels and Islamist networks making these communities untouchable, the Conservative contempt for the White working class alongside the Metropolitan Elite's desperate commitment to a multicultural utopia created the perfect climate that facilitated the industrial scale gang rape of the nation's children.

This wasn't about political correctness gone wrong or anything to do with a fear of being branded racist. It was about political corruption, class contempt, and ideological fanaticism all converging to abandon working-class White children whilst they were groomed, gang raped and trafficked across the country.

Why This Matters Now

Patel currently serves as Shadow Foreign Secretary. She's not some discredited backbencher, she's a senior opposition figure admitting that the state covered up industrial-scale child rape and that she was complicit in it.

Her offer to testify should be accepted immediately. Every word of her evidence should be broadcast live. The public deserves to hear exactly how the machinery of state was used to facilitate the rape of their children.

The Silence That Speaks Volumes

But here's what tells you everything about the state of British journalism: this interview happened on Sunday, and you're probably reading about the ramifications here for the first time. Three minutes of a former Home Secretary confessing to state-facilitated child rape, and our media treats it as a minor political story.

That silence is complicity. Every editor who buried this story, every journalist who ignored it, every broadcaster who gave it thirty seconds - they're all part of the same system that Patel describes. They know that giving this the coverage it deserves would more than destroy careers, it would bring down governments.

What Happens Next

The national inquiry that our six-year campaign finally forced into existence now has a star witness offering to expose the deepest levels of state corruption. But will they take her testimony seriously, or will it be another establishment whitewash?

We're at a crossroads. Either we demand full accountability for what Patel has admitted, or we accept that child rape is the price our establishment is willing to pay for political stability.

I know which side I'm on. The question is: which side are you on?

If you believe Keir Starmer and his Pakistani gangster Islamist courting Labour Party narrative, then once they could no longer dismiss the industrial-scale gang rape of young white girls as a “far-right conspiracy,” we’re told it was fear of being labelled racist that stopped police, public servants, and politicians from protecting those children.

If you believe me, you’ll know the truth is far worse:
They didn’t fail to act because they were afraid. They failed to act because they gained from the silence. They protected the perpetrators because the system rewarded their complicity.

And if you’ve followed my work, you’ll also know they’ve tried, again and again, to silence me. They’ve failed. I’ve exposed the evidence. I’ve laid bare the mechanics of the cover-up.

Now the question is: will enough of you stand with me?

Because if we act together, we stand a real chance of not just of holding every complicit official to account, but of ensuring this never happens again.

If we do nothing, if we simply complain while watching from the sidelines, then this National Inquiry will be nothing more than another whitewash.

But if we join the campaign that forced this inquiry into existence, if enough of us stand up, then politicians will go to prison. This government will fall. And the Labour Party will be finished.

If there’s even a one-in-a-million chance of achieving that, would you not take 10 seconds to stand with me?

By now, most of you know who I am. You know what I’ve done. And you know I’m not here to play games.

I’m not a Maggie Oliver. I’m not a Tommy Robinson or a Charlie Peters. I’m a political campaigner. Despite attempts to smear me, imprison me, even kill me, I’ve led the political movement that forced this inquiry into existence.

But to take on the full weight of the state and win, we need to scale up. Fast.

We need 10,000 committed people willing to learn the facts, raise awareness, and fight smart in their own communities. Right now, we’re just under 5,000. That 's some going. We need at least 5,000 more.

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Raja Miah MBE