Step right up, ladies and gentlemen, to witness the grand performance of Sir Keir Starmer, our Prime Minister, who has at last deigned to notice the Casey report—emerging from a decade-long slumber like a somnambulist who’s tripped over a spotlight while dreaming of Labour’s eternal glory. Once the lofty Director of Public Prosecutions, a man you’d think might spot a scandal the size of a small continent, Starmer has instead perfected the art of looking baffled, as if the Rotherham abuse dossier were a cryptic crossword clue he’s yet to decipher with his trusty biro.
Let’s rewind to 2014, when Starmer penned a Guardian article on Rotherham with all the gravitas of a man who’d just discovered tea stains on his desk. Back then, the scale of the abuse was a neon sign flashing “Do Something,” yet our hero dithered like a debutante at her first ball, more concerned with the hem of his political frock than the cries of the victims. Now, a decade later, he blinks into the limelight, claiming ignorance with the innocence of a choirboy caught with a slingshot—except this choirboy’s been running the country and turning a blind eye to a horror show that would make Dante blush.
But fear not, for Starmer is not alone in this cavalcade of incompetence. His cabinet, a rogues’ gallery of nodding dogs and yes-men, rivals the Keystone Cops in their slapstick evasion. Take the Home Secretary, who’s spent more time polishing her title than addressing the rot beneath it, or the Justice Minister, who seems to think “justice” is a quaint notion best left to Victorian novels. Together, they form a chorus line of apathy, pirouetting around the truth with the grace of elephants on roller skates, all while the Labour Party claps from the sidelines like indulgent parents at a talent-free school play.
Why, you ask, has this inquiry been shunned? Oh, the excuses are a masterclass in creative cowardice. Starmer opines that it might “undermine efforts” to implement the Jay Report, as if justice were a delicate soufflé that collapses under scrutiny. Then there’s the gem about victims not wanting to speak—conveniently overlooking the fact they’ve been screaming into the void for years, only to be met with the Labour Party’s soundproofed sanctimony. And the pièce de résistance: “Extremists might exploit it.” Yes, nothing screams “leadership” like letting imaginary bogeymen dictate policy, as if Starmer’s government were a haunted house run by a committee of timid ghosts.
This, dear reader, is the Labour Party in its current incarnation—a ship of fools captained by a man who’d struggle to navigate a puddle, crewed by a cabinet that thinks governance is a game of pass-the-parcel with the buck always landing elsewhere. Their strategy? Bury the scandal under a mountain of platitudes, hoping the public’s memory is as short as a soundbite. It’s a performance so exquisitely inept it could headline at the Edinburgh Fringe—if only they’d admit they’re the punchline.
Let’s not mince words: Starmer’s tenure is less a premiership than a prolonged audition for the role of Neville Chamberlain’s understudy, complete with an umbrella and a speech about “peace in our time” that translates to “inaction in our decade.” His cabinet, meanwhile, is a parade of mediocrity—each member a walking testament to the Peter Principle, promoted to their level of incompetence and then some. And the Labour Party? Once a beacon of working-class grit, it’s now a tepid bureaucracy, more obsessed with its own image than the people it purports to serve, a political equivalent of a heritage railway that’s run out of steam.
The victims, of course, are the forgotten extras in this tragicomedy. While Starmer and his troupe rehearse their lines, these souls are left waiting—like theatre-goers who’ve paid full price for a play where the lead actor has forgotten his script and the stagehands are on strike. The abuse scandals, particularly Rotherham’s grim legacy, deserve a reckoning, but instead, they get a masterclass in procrastination from a Prime Minister who’d rather rearrange deck chairs on the Titanic than steer it away from the iceberg.
So here we stand, June 2025, with a Labour government that’s less a lion of justice than a lamb of convenience, bleating about integrity while dodging responsibility with the agility of a sloth on a treadmill. Starmer’s legacy, if we can call it that, will be a monument to missed opportunities—a statue of a man peering through his fingers at a crisis he helped prolong. As for his cabinet and party, they’re welcome to their self-congratulatory backslapping, but the rest of us will be over here, applauding the only performance worthy of note: the slow-motion collapse of a government that never quite got the memo about governing.