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Keir Starmer’s government has announced a near tenfold increase in funding for detectives investigating grooming gangs, but police warned the amount will “likely fall short” of what is needed.
Operation Beaconport, established last year to review closed group-based sexual exploitation inquiries in England and Wales, will receive nearly £38m, a Home Office statement said, up from £4m allocated last year.
Police forces will also receive £9m to acquire AI technology to detect online abusers more rapidly as part of a £100m package to tackle child sexual abuse.
The money will “likely fall short” of the amount needed to cover their work addressing group-based child exploitation, police sources warned.
The scale and complexity of the reviews are expected to require a significant number of officers over an extended period, one source said. The increased funding is not expected to cover what forces would need for a dedicated team, the source added.
The prime minister faces political pressure to tackle grooming gangs, a key campaigning issue for Nigel Farage’s Reform UK in Labour’s heartlands.
The extra funding follows the resignation last week of Home Office minister Jess Phillips, who criticized Starmer for a lack of urgency and boldness in tackling online abuse.
Responding to the announcement on Tuesday, Phillips said: “It is about time that both grooming gangs and all forms of child sexual abuse were seen as a priority that it is and this extra funding will go a long way to righting the historical wrongs … Now all our efforts must turn to preventing the harm from happening in the first place.”
Ministers came under pressure over grooming gangs in January 2025 after X owner Elon Musk highlighted the government’s decision to refuse Oldham council’s request for a second national inquiry.
Starmer announced in June that there would be a specific grooming gangs inquiry, but then struggled to set it up.
The Guardian disclosed in October that the new inquiry had stalled amid wrangles over its remit and difficulties in finding a chair.
Anne Longfield, former children’s commissioner for England, eventually agreed to chair the £65m statutory inquiry, which will directly examine whether ethnicity, culture or religion influenced offending and whether they shaped the institutional response.
It will investigate how grooming gangs operated and how institutions, including police, local authorities, health services, social care services and schools, responded to abuse.
Police officers will also have access to a suite of “AI-enabled intelligence tools” under Home Office plans, helping them analyze large datasets, translate foreign-language material, and identify patterns and relationships between suspects.
Backed by £9m, the technology will allow forces to bring predators to justice “regardless of size or local resources,” the government said.
Another £11.7m will fund the Undercover Online Network, which targets predators on the dark web. The network tracks and identifies offenders, intervenes early and drives arrests and prosecutions. Its work helped safeguard 1,748 children between April 2024 and 2025, with 1,797 arrests also made.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said: “The grooming gangs scandal is one of the darkest moments in our country’s history, where the most vulnerable people were abused and exploited at the hands of evil child rapists. There will be no hiding place for the predatory monsters who committed unimaginable crimes of child sexual abuse [CSA] and exploitation. We will track down these vile rapists and put them behind bars.”
National Crime Agency’s Jav Oomer said: “We welcome the continued Home Office funding to support the NCA’s vital work in tackling the highest harm offenders, whether they operate in our communities or online, and will use the full force of our capabilities to protect children.”
“We continue to see the increasing complexity and severity of CSA offending, with offenders becoming more technologically sophisticated, but also producing more severe and more sadistic material.”
