The Words Jess Phillips Refused to Say About The Rape Gangs

The Words Jess Phillips Refused to Say About The Rape Gangs

When Jess Phillips stood at that dispatch box, she thought she was delivering a masterclass in political management. No stone would be left unturned, she declared. No hiding place for perpetrators. Justice for every victim. The words rolled off her tongue with practiced authority.

But some of us have learned to listen for the silences. We've learned, that when it comes to the Labour Party, what their politicians refuse to say matters more than their empty promises. And Phillips' performance was a symphony of calculated omissions. Each silence revealed the boundaries Phillips and her rape gang protecting Labour Party have drawn around truth itself.

The Silence Around "Muslim"

Not once did Phillips use the word Muslim. Think about that. Other MPs did. They spoke bluntly about the institutional terror of offending Muslim communities. But Phillips treated that word like it would burn her tongue.

This isn't accidental forgetfulness. This is political calculation at its most cynical.

Reliance on the Muslim Vote
Phillips knows exactly what she's doing. Like so many Labour MPs, she represents areas where the Muslim vote decides elections. Cross that demographic, lose your seat. It's that brutal, that simple.

Survivors' Testimony
Phillips' silence erases survivors' voices. These girls told us their rapes were religiously motivated. They described being called "dirty white slags" who deserved abuse because they weren't Muslim. Every time Phillips swallows that word, she betrays their testimony all over again.

Perpetrators' Justifications
Some perpetrators weaponised Islam to justify their crimes. Whether that reflects twisted theology or calculated manipulation doesn't matter. It happened. Documented. Proven. Pakistani men convicted of gang raping little White girls left the court rooms shouting Allahu Akbar. Yet Phillips would rather sanitise reality than speak it.

The Controlled Use of "Pakistani"

When Phillips finally used "Pakistani" exactly twice, every word was surgical. Calculated. Controlled.

Reframing Pakistanis as Truth Seekers
Listen to this sleight of hand: she claimed the "Pakistani part of my community" were the most fervent truth seekers. Brilliant, isn't it? Transform the demographic producing disproportionate offenders into the champions of justice. Rewrite reality in real time.

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Admitting Disproportionate Offending Then Diluting It
She acknowledged Casey's findings about "disproportionate Pakistani heritage" involvement. Then immediately pivoted to bureaucracy. Better data collection, administrative tweaks. Watch a moral crisis become a filing system problem before your eyes.

The Racial Motivation Blind Spot
Phillips' performance becomes truly obscene here. Survivors have told us repeatedly they were hunted because they were white. Called "white meat." Told they were "fair game" because of their race. That's racial targeting. Textbook racial hatred.

Phillips heard this testimony. She knows these facts. Yet she cannot call this racially motivated crime. Why? Because naming racial targeting of white girls by Pakistani men shatters too many comfortable narratives.

Pre Determining the Inquiry's Boundaries
Phillips reveals her real agenda here. She's not launching an independent inquiry. She's managing one. By talking about abstract "intersections with ethnicity, race, and culture," she's already decided what can be investigated.

A real inquiry follows evidence wherever it leads. It examines cultural patterns, ideological influences, historical precedents. Anything that might explain why this particular demographic is so catastrophically over-represented. Rape Genocide is real. Pakistan’s involvement is a matter of fact. Historical records confirm it was used in 1947 to ethnically cleanse areas of Pakistan of Hindus and Sikhs. The United Nations has documented how the Pakistani regime used racially motivated and religiously justified Rape Genocide of at least 200,000 Bangladeshi girls and women over a 9 month period in 1971.

These Pakistani war crimes are irrefutable. Yet Phillips is too scared to go here. Is rape a feature of Pakistani culture? Did these men bring to the UK to do to White people what they did to Hindus, Sikhs and the Bangladeshis?

Instead, Phillips is pre-filtering acceptable conclusions. She's decided what's "appropriate" to investigate before the inquiry even begins. That's not independence. That's institutional control dressed up as justice.

The Ignored Victims: White Working Class Girls

Then came Phillips' most calculated lie. She claimed to have met victims who were "black, white, Asian." Sounds inclusive, doesn't it? Sounds caring.

It's neither. It's erasure.

Disguising the Pattern
Every major case tells the same story: the overwhelming majority of grooming gang victims were white working class girls. Not black girls. Not Asian girls. White working class girls from towns the establishment had already written off.

Phillips knows this. The data is undeniable. Yet she deliberately obscures this reality with diversity speak.

Erasing the Victim Profile
Why hide who these victims were? Because naming them means confronting why they were chosen. These weren't random selections. These girls were hunted because they were White, working class, and deemed disposable by everyone around them.

The Racism Phillips Won't Name
When survivors tell you they were targeted for being white, that's racial selection. When they describe being called "white slags," that's racial hatred. Phillips' "inclusive" language doesn't just ignore this. It actively erases it.

Justice Denied Three Times
These girls were failed first by predators who saw them as racially inferior prey. Failed again by institutions too cowardly to act. Now Phillips wants to fail them a third time by refusing to even accurately describe who they were or why they were chosen.

Why This Silence Matters

Phillips' word games aren't just politics. They're institutional gaslighting. Muslim erased completely. Pakistani sanitised and rationed. White working class victims disappeared into meaningless diversity statistics.

This linguistic manipulation shapes official records, warps public understanding, and continues the same culture of denial that enabled these crimes in the first place. Phillips isn't ending the cover up. She's perfecting it.

What was once crude institutional denial has evolved into sophisticated truth management. Same lies, better packaging. Same betrayal, smoother delivery.

The victims Phillips claims to champion deserve better than her managed truth. They deserve the whole truth, spoken without calculation or compromise. They deserve politicians who can name perpetrators, victims, and motivations without flinching.

But that would require moral courage Phillips clearly doesn't possess. So the betrayal continues, wrapped in the language of justice, delivered with the confidence of someone who thinks we're too stupid to notice.

We notice. We remember. And we won't let them bury the truth in their word games anymore.


I am Raja Miah. It is now seven years since I first started to expose how politicians protected the rape gangs.

Labour Party leaders tried everything to stop me - they fabricated evidence and used Greater Manchester Police and the CPS to try and maliciously prosecute me. I spent over three years on bail as case after case collapsed in court. My mother died before I could clear my name.

The truth is now undeniable: the Pakistani rape gangs are real, their victims number in the hundreds of thousands, and the cover-up continues.

The National Inquiry we fought for is about to begin. This is our one chance to ensure it isn't another whitewash. But only if enough people know what really happened and are prepared to fight back against the next attempt at a cover up.

Despite a mainstream media blackout of my work, Red Wall and the Rabble has grown to over 6,000 subscribers. Help me reach 10,000 before the inquiry begins.

Every new subscriber makes it harder for them to bury this story. Every share makes it more difficult to dismiss the evidence. Every voice raised makes justice more likely.

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This is the fight. This is the moment. There will not be another.

- Raja Miah MBE