Teds challenge Yvette Cooper with judicial review for refusal to call enquiry into rape gangs
Thu 3:07 pm +00:00, 13 Feb 2025| Re: Proposed Judicial Review of the decision of Yvette Cooper, Home Secretary not to order a Public Inquiry into both the perpetrators and the official collusion with the Pakistani Muslim Child Rape Gangs Further to the above, please click on the link below to read my Letter before Action to the Rt Hon Yvette Cooper MP and Jess Philipps MP, together with my Grounds of Application, for your information. |
https://www.englishdemocrats.party/rape_gangs_judicial_review
PROPOSED JUDICIAL REVIEW OF THE DECISION OF YVETTE COOPER, HOME SECRETARY AND OF JESS PHILLIPS, “SAFE-GUARDING MINISTER”, NOT TO GRANT THE APPLICATION BY OLDHAM COUNCIL FOR A PUBLIC ENQUIRY INTO THE OFFICIAL NEGLECT CONCERNING PAKISTANI MUSLIM CHILD RAPE GANGS
The Home Secretary was asked by Oldham Council in her statutory role to exercise her statutory powers to order a public enquiry into the dereliction of duty to protect English girls by police, social workers, council workers, councillors and national politicians.
The Home Secretary improperly delegated answering this request to Jess Phillips and their joint refusal to agree to this, it would be argued, was to protect their current and former Labour Party colleagues, with a view to denying the compiling of evidence which would allow Labour politicians, in particular, to be sued for their misconduct in public office and for their generally appalling dereliction of their duties.
It is asserted that this dereliction of duty was politically motivated, not only from the point of view of political advantage, but also as part of their ideological support for the British official policies of inadequately regulated mass immigration and of State imposed multi-culturalism. These are legally irrelevant considerations which should not have influenced the thinking of Mrs Cooper and Ms Phillips in dealing with this request or any of the many subsequent requests.
In the circumstances it is submitted that the on-going failure to order the setting up of a public enquiry has not been properly decided according to law by the Home Secretary or by the “Safe-Guarding Minister” in the exercise of their statutory powers. Their decisions are therefore legally challengeable in Judicial Review.
The Labour Government’s deflection stratagem of urging local Inquires is no answer to the requirement of a national statutory Inquiry.
READ OUR GROUNDS OF APPLICATION














