The minister of Pakistani origin controls Interior, borders, and Police amid a crisis in Labour
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Following the resignation of the progressive Keir Starmer, the British Labour Party has plunged into a severe internal crisis and has begun a race against time to define the next leadership of the United Kingdom. In this context, the Pakistani-born Home Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, emerges as one of the most promising figures within the cabinet and could become the first Muslim Prime Minister in British history.
Mahmood currently holds one of the most sensitive and inefficient positions in the UK government. As the head of the Home Office, she oversees borders, immigration policy, internal security, and the British Police, an institution that has been heavily criticized for years due to allegations of cover-ups, inaction, and negligence regarding the gangs of rapists and sexual exploiters known as grooming gangs.
In the midst of the crisis over Muslim sexual abuse, Labour proposes a Muslim minister.
For years, thousands of minors fell victim to networks of sexual exploitation while state agencies, police forces, and local authorities acted late, looked the other way, and avoided intervening decisively for fear of being labeled racist by European progressivism.
The Labour leader, a practicing Muslim from a Pakistani family, made history in 2024 by becoming the first Muslim woman to hold the position of Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice. At that ceremony, she swore on the Quran, a gesture celebrated by British progressivism as a symbol of diversity.
Her rise occurs amid an unprecedented political scandal. Starmer leaves power battered by electoral defeats, internal rebellions, declining popularity, and the rise of Reform UK, the party of Nigel Farage, which capitalized on the frustration of millions of Britons regarding uncontrolled immigration, insecurity, and political correctness.
Shabana Mahmood
For Labour, her figure represents diversity and renewal. For her critics, however, she symbolizes the direction of a country ruined by multiculturalism and now facing the consequences of having subordinated the security of its citizens to progressive dogmas.
The British crisis is no longer just an internal fight within the Labour Party. It is an open cultural dispute and a symptom of an exhausted model, where the political elite promised stability and ended up delivering weak borders, discredited institutions, and a society violated by a left without criteria.