> Ed Miliband has since retracted this statement acknowledging that saying anything about the child abuse scandal in Rotherham is unwise and in fact he now intends to ignore it, lest any promises of action be misinterpreted as political.
Intended satire or not, that is exactly what he should have done. It's despicable that he should attempt to make political capital out of the Rotherham scandal.
EM> “We have big lessons to learn as a society about this and we are absolutely determined to protect our country’s children.”
That is stating the obvious. Next he'll be saying it wouldn't have happened on his watch ... except it did (something he failed to mention).
A simple, apolitical response would have been "What happened in Rotherham was an absolute disgrace and I'm sure that, whoever the next Prime Minister is, they will take a look at the report's findings and use them to better protect our country's children".
Instead, he implied that he would do something and nobody else would, when the very reason he was being asked the question was because it happened under Labour.