You'd said "enquiries don’t work in this country aside from politicians not implementing the changes they suggest"
Labour said that there'd been an inquiry (Jay) and they were implementing its recommendations (whereas Johnson had called it spaffing millions up the wall, and Truss and Sunak - and Badenoch as minister for women - had done nothing).
There should not be a new inquiry into child sexual exploitation.
www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk
Labour instead got Baroness Casey to review what had been done and what more needed to be done - presumably not expecting her to say there
should be another national inquiry (thus proving her independence). People have then gone mad over what she
actually recommended ("keep it focussed", "make it wider", "ignore white grooming gangs", "include non-gang CSE - i.e. within families") and the whole issue is now a "political football" ("We won" - Badenoch) - indeed some survivors being used thus.
So I'm suggesting that Labour's approach (pre-Casey) had been right - no "national" inquiry but do more local inquiries like Telford.
https://www.telford.gov.uk/children...nto-telford-child-sexual-exploitation-iitcse/