Why Did Yvette Cooper Recruit Amanda Chadderton?

Why Did Yvette Cooper Recruit Amanda Chadderton?

From Rejected Council Leader to Home Secretary's Campaign Manager

Was this appointment a reward for loyalty in helping conceal the cover up of the gang rape of little White girls in exchange for the bloc vote from the traditional Labour Party supporting Pakistani/Bangladeshi/Muslim community?

The evidence raises disturbing questions about the relationship between political advancement and accountability. After losing her safe Labour seat in Royton South, a remarkable electoral rejection following our campaign, Amanda Chadderton somehow secured a prominent position with one of Labour's most senior figures.

Consider the troubling pattern:

  • Amanda Chadderton was one of Jim McMahon's three political protégés, alongside Sean Fielding and Arooj Shah
  • After our campaign successfully removed both Fielding and Shah as Council leaders for their role in covering up child sexual abuse during McMahon's leadership, Labour installed Chadderton as their replacement
  • Chadderton publicly defended Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham's shambolic Assurance Review, repeatedly dismissing evidence of a cover-up in what was a coordinated attempt to discredit our findings
  • Despite powerful opposition and my multiple false arrests, our campaign persisted until voters removed Chadderton from her previously secure Labour seat
  • Shortly afterward, she was appointed Campaign Manager for Yvette Cooper, who is now Home Secretary
  • Cooper continues blocking calls for a National Inquiry that would examine these very allegations

The timing and circumstances surrounding this appointment demand scrutiny. Why would the future Home Secretary select someone who had just been rejected by voters after serious allegations of covering up child abuse? Was this position a reward for loyalty in maintaining the official narrative?

Fighting an Uphill Battle

We're losing the fight to expose what happened. The powerful groups covering this up have more money and influence than we do.

Look at what happens when other issues grab public attention. Protests about Gaza raised millions overnight. When people fought against Andy Burnham's congestion charges, they quickly gathered enough support to force him to back down.

But after six years exposing how children were abused on an industrial scale, we still have fewer than 3,000 supporters. Just this week, approaching 1 million people saw my posts across my social media pages. Yet our total numbers (both paid and free combined) of supporters grew by less than 50.

This tells me something troubling about what our society really cares about. Why is it so hard to get support when fighting for abused children?

I'll keep going because these victims deserve justice, but I can't win alone against such powerful opposition. The question is simple: Do enough people care about these children to stand with us?

About Me

For newcomers: I'm Raja Miah MBE. For six years, I've led a campaign exposing how Labour politicians protected Pakistani rape gangs.

We face powerful opposition: media, politicians, police, and public officials working to conceal this cover-up. To continue, we must grow our support.

My website documents all evidence, investigations, and our fight for justice. It's free to access, though subscriptions (from just 75p weekly or £30 annually) help sustain this work:

One-time contributions also make a difference:

👉 http://BuyMeACoffee.com/recusantnine

👉 http://paypal.me/RecusantNine

We cannot secure a National Inquiry without your support. What happens next depends on you.

Raja 🙏