Theresa May – Legacy of Failure

Theresa May Will Sabotage It!

In today’s publication, The Party will be examining examples of how Theresa May, as home secretary and later – from July 2016 – as prime minister of the then-UK, was appointed to deliberately perpetuate a legacy of failure based upon kicking the can down the road, whether on the Chilcot Inquiry on how Tony Blair committed Treason to get Britain into war in Iraq, the inquiry on establishment child abuse, or the referendum on leaving the European Union.

It is fair to say that Theresa May was a cog in the wheel working for a much broader cohort of Whitehall officials and politicians – both serving and retired – whose duty was to make a pig’s ear of any event that could bring accountability to the UK establishment, regardless whether a public inquiry or a referendum.

Deleted and Gone

The following is an example from The Guardian dated 15 October 2015:

Submissions sent through an online form to the inquiry between 14 September and 2 October (2015) were instantly and permanently deleted on Thursday before they reached staff.

The information had been sent to the “share your experience” section of the independent inquiry into child sex abuse (IICSA) website, set up for victims and survivors wanting to share their experiences with officials working on the probe.

Here the link to The Guardian.

We need to consider that this was all about an official cover-up, as explained in the same article:

The inquiry – set last July following claims of high level cover-up of abuse – has been beset by delays following the resignation of two previous chairwomen, Lady Butler-Sloss and Fiona Woolf.

Lowell Goddard, a New Zealand judge, finally opened the probe earlier this year. It is set to be Britain’s largest ever public inquiry and is expected to take up to five years.

Lowell Goddard

The sudden departure from Britain in 2016 of New Zealand’s Lowell Goddard after one and a half years as chairwoman of the public inquiry into establishment child abuse in England and Wales shouldn’t have really come as a surprise going on the assumption she was an honest person unacquainted with UK establishment lies and cover-ups.

Wikipedia (1) explains:

In February 2015, Lowell Goddard was appointed to head the statutory public inquiry to replace the independent panel inquiry into child sex abuse in England and Wales.

In August 2016, she tendered her resignation from the child abuse inquiry in a letter to the home secretary Amber Rudd. Shortly after she wrote a report to the home secretary outlining her concerns on issues faced by the inquiry.

Here the link to Wikipedia’s article.

In this brief note to Amber Rudd, Mrs. Goddard stated that the public inquiry was a legacy of failure! She was clearly referring to the UK established order.

Wikipedia goes on to clarify:

Claims of racism and bullying made by British newspapers, more than two months after her resignation, were strenuously denied by her. In November 2016, Goddard announced that she would not be appearing in person before the home affairs select committee, citing legal advice.

History to Child Abuse Inquiry

According to Wikipedia, the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse in England and Wales was announced by the British home secretary Theresa May, on 7 July 2014.

It was set up after investigations in 2012 and 2013 into the Jimmy Savile sexual abuse scandal revealed widespread abuse by prominent media and political figures, including claims of abuse stretching back over decades, and inadequate safeguarding by institutions and organizations responsible for child welfare.

On 4 February 2015, Theresa May announced that the inquiry would be chaired by Dame Lowell Goddard because she had no ties to the UK bodies and persons likely to be investigated (contrary to the previous two).

The existing panel was disbanded, and the inquiry was given new powers as a statutory inquiry.

Here is the link to the second Wikipedia article.

Dangerous Investigations

The inquiry took a new course and went exactly there where it was never meant to be headed, namely in the direction of the UK establishment and its criminal record.

Wikipedia notes that, In November 2015, Dame Lowell Goddard announced that 12 separate investigations would be undertaken as part of the inquiry, including investigations into MPs, local councils and church organizations.

At this point, we needn’t ask why she suddenly departed from Britain in August 2016 and refused to return.

She wasn’t the only person to cry foul, as Wikipedia further points out:

In June 2017, the group survivors of organised and institutional abuse withdrew with deep regret from the inquiry, as it was ‘not fit for purpose’.

The group also declared that the victims were totally marginalised by the public inquiry.

All considered, we may assume that the public inquiry into institutional child abuse was never meant to result in members of the establishment being investigated, charged and prosecuted. We may instead take for granted that they were protected from justice and their crimes covered up, denied and buried. They got away with it just as Jimmy Savile had owing to his connections!

Chilcot Report on Tony Blair

Another public inquiry sabotaged by Theresa May as home secretary and later as prime minister is the Chilcot Inquiry. It was specifically meant to investigate if the former prime minister Tony Blair had lied to parliament in order to get Britain into war against Iraq.

After many years of pointless delay, the report was finally released just after the June 2016 referendum on Brexit, because it was a forgone conclusion that the ensuing sabotage that Theresa May, by now prime minister, would inflict on the referendum’s outcome would make the Chilcot Report fade into insignificance. This report was heavily redacted and watered down, bearing all the hallmarks of a dictatorship’s version where the facts are first distorted or deleted and then flung under a rug to be covered up by the next great public distraction, which, as mentioned, was how to sabotage Brexit?.

The Party has explained in previous editions that, after leaving office as prime minister, Labour’s Tony Blair transferred his office somewhere to the Middle East and got immensely rich brokering arms deals between the Tory party government and private oil-dynasty families in the Arabian peninsular.

He also worked as ‘adviser’ to the UK Tory government in matters of foreign affairs. So we needn’t elaborate on why David Cameron and Theresa May systematically delayed and sabotaged – and later watered down the Chilcot Public Inquiry, to then never act upon it at all once it was released. It is clear that Tony Blair not only appears to have committed a serious act of Treason while in office as PM when he lied to parliament on behalf of one or more foreign entities, but was actively working with the Conservative-run government that later replaced the Labour government.

The fact that he was working for the Tory government as ‘adviser’ and also for Whitehall during the Chilcot Inquiry signifies a serious conflict of interest concerning the investigations and can easily explain why it was systematically delayed, diluted and then flung to the heap to decay underneath the next Tory enterprise, which, as seen, was the monumental attempt to render ineffective the June 2016 referendum on EU membership.


Albion


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