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Wes Streeting in the TV Bast-Up via Labor MPS care scandal Slur | Politics | News

Wes Streeting said, Lucy Powell's comments that seemed to have seemed to describe a question about the care of gangs as “dog whistle”, were not interpreted as his cabinet colleague intended.

When asked whether he and his Labor colleagues see the scandal for the care bands as a dog whistle problem or a “coded signal of racists”, the Minister of Health said: “No and I do not think that Lucy intended to imply in a heated debate on radio 4, and therefore apologizes for what she said.

“I don't think she meant for a moment or wanted the imposition of these problems and speaking about these problems with dog whistles.”

“We make all mistakes” and the most important thing is that “we own it,” said Mr. Streeting on Sunday morning of Sky News with the Trevor Phillips program.

When asked whether Ms. Powell's task as the leader of the House of Commons was safe, he said: “I think she made a real mistake.

Ms. Powell, the leader of the House of Commons, spoke in BBC Radio 4's all questions for Tim Montgomerie, the founder of Conservative Home.

In the midst of a discussion about the diversity editions of the councils, Mr. Montgomerie asked Ms. Powell whether she had observed the recent Docking Channel 4 documentary with five women who had become victims of sexual care in Great Britain.

Mr. Montgomerie asked: “I don't know if you saw the documentary on Channel 4 about rape gangs.”

Which woman Powell, the Lord President of the Council, replied: “Oh, we want to blow this little trumpet now, do you?

Mr. Montgomerie replied: “There is a real problem in which … there were so many people in the local government in the authorities who were concerned for good reason to upset the tensions of the community that these girls were unexpectedly.”

The film by Channel 4, Greomed: A national scandal, dealt with the stories of five women who had been targeted by rape gangs in Great Britain.

Ms. Powell's comments, who has been the Labor MP for Manchester Central since 2012, immediately rose anger from her political opponents.

Katie Lam, the Tory deputy for Wead von Kent, said: “If the leader of the lower house does not believe that industrialized sexual torture of children is only a” dogefiff “and a” small trumpet “, she should take it back and say it.

“If she actually believes that, she has no shop in the cabinet and should resign.”

In an apology, said Ms. Powell: “In the heat of a discussion about AQ [Any Questions]I would like to make it clear that I look at the problems of exploiting and care for children with extreme seriousness.

“I'm sorry if this was unclear. I questioned the political point that scored around him around him, not the problem itself.

“As a member of the constituency, I dealt with terrible cases. This government deals with the truth and grant justice.”

Robert Jenrick, the secretary of the Shadow Justice, said: “Lucy Powell from Labor is of the opinion that it is a” dogefiff “to request arrests and accountability for the rape gangs. What a disgusting betrayal of the victims are part of the cover -up.”

A spokesman for the reform in Great Britain said: “If yesterday's local election results were not enough, Lucy Powell's hideous comments really show what is outside the Labor party.

“She does not take the mass rape of young girls through mostly Pakistani men seriously. The mask has slipped. After these comments, Keir should think about whether Lucy Powell is fit.”

Channel 4's documentary showed that a report in which more than 330 young women, who were at risk from Asian nursing bonds, were suppressed as “toxic” and the Interior Ministry.

The 90-minute film shows that the report on the exploitation of children in Rotherham was part of the research work financed by Tony Blair's government in the early 2000s.

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