Whitehall
officials tried to cover up grooming scandal in 2011, Dominic Cummings says
Sky News can
reveal Michael Gove rejected advice from Department for Education officials who
suggested blocking The Times from publishing its investigations into the abuse.
By Liz
Bates, political correspondent, and Sam Coates, deputy political editor
Monday 16
June 2025 16:31, UK
Whitehall
officials tried to convince Michael Gove to go to court to cover up the
grooming scandal in 2011, Sky News can reveal.
Dominic
Cummings, who was working for Lord Gove at the time, has told Sky News that
officials in the Department for Education (DfE) wanted to help efforts by
Rotherham Council to stop a national newspaper from exposing the scandal.
The
revelation shines a light on the institutional reluctance of some key officials
in central government to publicly highlight the grooming gang scandal.
In 2011,
Rotherham Council approached the Department for Education asking for help
following inquiries by The Times. The paper's then chief reporter, the late
Andrew Norfolk, was asking about sexual abuse and trafficking of children in
Rotherham.
The council
went to Lord Gove's Department for Education for help. Officials considered the
request and then recommended to Lord Gove's office that the minister back a
judicial review which might, if successful, stop The Times publishing the
story.
Lord Gove
rejected the request on the advice of Mr Cummings. Sources have independently
confirmed Mr Cummings' account.
Mr Cummings
told Sky News: "Officials came to me in the Department of Education and
said: 'There's this Times journalist who wants to write the story about these
gangs. The local authority wants to judicially review it and stop The Times
publishing the story'.
"So I
went to Michael Gove and said: 'This council is trying to actually stop this
and they're going to use judicial review. You should tell the council that far
from siding with the council to stop The Times you will write to the judge and
hand over a whole bunch of documents and actually blow up the council's JR
(judicial review).'
"Some
officials wanted a total cover-up and were on the side of the council...
"They
wanted to help the local council do the cover-up and stop The Times' reporting,
but other officials, including in the DfE private office, said this is
completely outrageous and we should blow it up. Gove did, the judicial review
got blown up, Norfolk stories ran."
The judicial
review wanted by officials would have asked a judge to decide about the
lawfulness of The Times' publication plans and the consequences that would flow
from this information entering the public domain.
A second
source told Sky News that the advice from officials was to side with Rotherham
Council and its attempts to stop publication of details it did not want in the
public domain.
One of the
motivations cited for stopping publication would be to prevent the identities
of abused children entering the public domain.
There was
also a fear that publication could set back the existing attempts to halt the
scandal, although incidents of abuse continued for many years after these
cases.
Sources
suggested that there is also a natural risk aversion amongst officials to
publicity of this sort.
Mr Cummings,
who ran the Vote Leave Brexit campaign and was Boris Johnson's right-hand man
in Downing Street, has long pushed for a national inquiry into grooming gangs
to expose failures at the heart of government.
He said the
inquiry, announced today, "will be a total s**tshow for Whitehall because
it will reveal how much Whitehall worked to try and cover up the whole
thing."
He also
described Mr Johnson, with whom he has a long-standing animus, as a
"moron' for saying that money spent on inquiries into historic child
sexual abuse had been "spaffed up the wall".
Asked by Sky
News political correspondent Liz Bates why he had not pushed for a public
inquiry himself when he worked in Number 10 in 2019-20, Mr Cummings said Brexit
and then COVID had taken precedence.
"There
are a million things that I wanted to do but in 2019 we were dealing with the
constitutional crisis," he said.
The
Department for Educaiton and Rotherham Council have been approached for
comment.
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