THERE’S something uncomfortably grotesque, to my mind, about a woman building herself a political career based uniquely upon the brutal murder of her sister. The ‘opportunist’ in question is Labour’s Spen Valley MP Kim Leadbeater, whose sister Jo Cox was shot and stabbed to death by the deranged Thomas Mair in 2016.
At least Leadbeater sat with her dignified, heartbroken parents throughout Mair’s Old Bailey trial. Jo Cox’s husband Brendan showed his face only at sentencing, treating the court to what felt like a public performance. Still, it’s ironic, on a volcanic scale, that Leadbeater’s only notable contribution to Westminster law-making has been to try to introduce a murder bill. Oops, sorry, an ‘assisted dying’ law which, in the wrong hands, could feasibly amount to one and the same.
I’m not sure where in Leadbeater’s nondescript past this death-passion came from, but it piles irony upon irony when considering that her voter base from her initial election in 2021 was built entirely upon taking a knee to Batley and Spen’s controlling Muslim voter cabal. After all these are Muslim men who dictate whether or not their women can leave the house, who instruct families and communities on how to vote and who, back in their own third-world dust-heaps, would be as likely to kick lesbian Kim off a rooftop as instruct her to sweep it clean.
March 24 being a notable anniversary in Batley and Spen’s recent history, I’m minded to wonder if Kim Leadbeater’s laissez faire attitude to summary killing explains her contemptible careless regard for the life of the Batley Grammar School teacher and his young family, still living in hiding, in fear of their lives.
It’s five years since the district’s Islamist clown-in-chief, self-anointed mufti Mohammed Amin Pandor, led a screaming rabble to the gates of the town’s school demanding the head of a teacher who had led an open discussion into how Islam’s prophet is portrayed. The man did nothing wrong, as an independent report duly confirmed. Waged against a howling, irrational mob however, it wasn’t worth the paper it was written on.
That was especially not when the then MP and now West Yorkshire Mayor, ex-Coronation Street bit-part actress Tracy Brabin, immediately cowered behind her desk, rapidly baling out of office for the comfort of the bigger job and making way for Leadbeater. In the five years since, neither she nor her successor has raised so much as an eyebrow, let alone a protesting voice, at Islam’s continued bullying despotism and the persecution of this innocent family.
They’re far from alone. Batley Grammar School’s board of governors abandoned the family to their fate. Likewise, Sir John Robins, the Chief Constable of West Yorkshire since 2019, although Robins’s institutional submission was no surprise to me at least. He was previously the Chief Superintendent charged with shutting down the ungovernable Dewsbury/Batley police division and relocating to the relative safety of Huddersfield.
Robins was duly rewarded with promotions, while Islam tightened its chokehold. First made a Superintendent in charge of Operational Policing in Bradford in 2003, he rose to prominence in districts where the Muslim rape gangs ran unchecked for years.
No doubt Robins will be comfortably ensconced in fur in the House of Lords before long rather than hauled before a national inquiry the nation impatiently awaits.
Friends of the Batley Grammar School teacher and his family continue to try to support them in absentia, although their GoFundMe campaign continues to be explicitly unacknowledged by Leadbeater, Brabin and co. The less said about Dewsbury and Batley’s de facto MP for Palestine, Iqbal Mohamed, the better.
For anyone wanting to help, a campaign run since their forced flight by family friend and local Batley hero Paul Halloran, can be found by clicking on this link.










