Left-Wing Pundits Refuse to Accept UK Rape Gangs Are Largely Pakistani and Muslim Because They Fear Being Labelled Racist

Left-wing pundits refuse to recognise the rape gangs operating in the UK are largely Pakistani and Muslim because they fear being labelled racist

RHODA WILSON

The elite class in British society, particularly those with left-leaning views, often spread misinformation to support their socially “liberal” agenda, Matt Goodwin says.

For example, in a recent interview with Rupert Lowe MP, Emily Maitlis, a former BBC presenter and now an independent podcaster, misrepresented evidence on Pakistani Muslim rape gangs, claiming that white British men are more likely to be involved in organised rape gangs.

However, evidence from various reports and investigations consistently shows that Pakistani Muslim men are disproportionately more likely to be arrested and convicted of organised rape gang activity.  But this evidence is being suppressed because it is considered racist.

How The Elite Class Mislead You – Part 2

By Matt Goodwin, 27 May 2025

Last week, we began a three-part series on how the elite class in British society – that left-leaning group of people who disproportionately dominate the institutions – mislead and gaslight the rest of the country when it comes to some of the most important issues of our time.

While the members of this left-leaning class talk endlessly about the need to counter “misinformation,” it is often they who are fully invested in spreading misinformation, especially when it comes to issues, beliefs and events that do not support their socially liberal [left-wing], if not radically woke, agenda.

In Part 1, we looked at the strange case of London’s Labour Mayor, Sadiq Khan, who has been pushing some rather misleading statistics about the impact of mass immigration on the UK economy, which contrary to what the new elite would have you believe is definitely not propelling us to the prosperous, sunlit uplands.

Read: How the elite class mislead you – Part 1, Matt Goodwin, 19 May 2025 (behind a paywall)

In Part 2, we turn to former BBC presenter and now podcaster Emily Maitlis, who, for all the reasons I’m about to outline, has similarly morphed into a symbol of this insular and increasingly remote class – somebody who claims she is interested in things such as truth, evidence and knowledge, except when these things happen to challenge or completely undermine her own ideological worldview.

Maitlis caught my attention because of her debate with former Reform UK and now independent MP, Rupert Lowe, during which she completely misrepresented the evidence on another issue that many people care a great deal about but which the elite class would rather not have to discuss – the Pakistani Muslim rape gangs.

In the heated debate, a clip of which you can watch below, a visibly irritated, angry and at times self-righteous Maitlis repeatedly criticised and attacked Lowe for what she clearly thinks are extreme views.

Much like the reaction of the elite class to the scandal more generally, she criticises him for drawing attention to the rape gangs. She criticises him for calling out one specific group. She criticises him for demanding a dedicated national inquiry into the issue. And she openly rejects much of what he says.

“It is absolutely not true”, she says, that the vast majority of rape gang perpetrators are Pakistani Muslim, even citing a report in The Times to suggest that whites are more likely to be involved in the rape gangs than Pakistani Muslims.

She openly describes Lowe as “racist” for talking about it, before going on to say that Lowe, who recently asked members of the public to donate to a campaign that is trying to force a fresh inquiry on the issue, should be “ashamed” for “making money” out of the “re-exploitation” of the victims of rape gangs.

And she makes an argument that is often made by Labour MPs, suggesting Rupert Lowe and others are wasting their time calling for a dedicated inquiry because “there has already been one,” in reference to the inquiry that was headed by Professor Alexis Jay, and which concluded its work three years ago.

Before I deconstruct these points one by one, and show you why Emily Maitlis and the elite class are completely and utterly wrong on this issue, watch this clip [3 mins of the video beginning as embedded below]:

The News Agents: Rupert Lowe – in his own words: “Farage, BULLYING and grooming gangs”, 15 May 2025 (39 mins)

Let’s start with Maitlis’s suggestion that white British men are more likely to be involved in organised rape gangs, that “there are four times, eight times, ten times as many white grooming gang suspects.”

To be honest, I wasn’t surprised to hear her say this. Why?

Because it’s the same view I encountered when I gave a talk to the similarly white, affluent, liberal [left-wing] and insular members of the elite class at the University of Oxford, many of whom, like Maitlis, are heavily invested in doing all they can to deny the uncomfortable reality.

Much like Lowe, for more than an hour I watched some of the most educated people in the country fall over themselves to claim that minorities have done nothing wrong and that, actually, the rape gang scandal is somehow the fault of white people.

The only problem is: this is completely and utterly wrong.  And to be perfectly honest with you, I think it’s outrageous that we have to keep pointing this out to supposed “journalists” who are meant to be committed to pursuing the truth, not morphing into political activists who routinely prioritise their own radical ideological views over the truth.

Read: Inside the Sick Grooming Scandal, Matt Goodwin, 8 November 2023

The reality is this.

Anybody who knows anything about the rape gang scandal knows there is now a mountain of evidence which points clearly to the conclusion that everybody in the elite class would rather we all avoid and pretend is not there: Pakistani Muslim men are consistently and disproportionately more likely to be arrested and convicted of organised rape gang activity.

Here’s what I wrote last year, in this newsletter, right after I discussed the issue at Oxford, where, astonishingly, I also found myself having to point out to the audience that one of the most prolific rape gangs in the country had been active in … Oxford.

My summary of the evidence is worth quoting and reading in full, not only because we’ve welcomed a lot of new readers since then but because, clearly, lots of people in the media class are still not aware of what is actually behind the scandal:

Which is why we have some truly shocking statistics in some areas of Britain.  Like the fact that in Rochdale, 1 in every 280 Muslim men over the age of 16 were prosecuted for rape gang offences, in Telford it was 1 in every 126, and in Rotherham, the epicentre of the scandal, it was 1 in every 73. Think about that. 1 in every 73.

Read: The scandal that shames Britain and makes me angrier than I’ve ever been, Matt Goodwin, 3 January 2025 (behind a paywall)

And nor is this the only evidence which, clearly, the producers and editors of The News Agents podcast either have not bothered to read or find too uncomfortable.

About the Author

Matthew Goodwin is a British political scientist and commentator known for his research on populism and right-wing movements. He was a professor of politics at the University of Kent until July 2024.

Goodwin has authored several books, including ‘Values, Voice and Virtue: The New British Politics’ and ‘National Populism: The Revolt Against Liberal Democracy’ (co-authored with Roger Eatwell), and ‘Revolt on the Right: Explaining Support for the Radical Right in Britain’ (co-authored with Robert Ford).

You can follow him on SubstackYouTubeInstagramTikTok, Twitter/X and Facebook.

Featured image: One of the teenagers who claimed to be a victim of sexual abuse and grooming at the hands of organised rape gangs in Rotherham. Source: The Week


This article (Left-wing pundits refuse to recognise the rape gangs operating in the UK are largely Pakistani and Muslim because they fear being labelled racist) was created and published by The Expose and is republished here under “Fair Use” with attribution to the author Matt Goodwin, and with intro by Rhoda Wilson

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