Digital Exploitation of Women and Girls Debate

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Department: Home Office

Digital Exploitation of Women and Girls

Michelle Welsh Excerpts
Tuesday 27th January 2026

(1 day, 9 hours ago)

Westminster Hall
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Michelle Welsh Portrait Michelle Welsh (Sherwood Forest) (Lab)
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It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Ms Jardine. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Preston (Sir Mark Hendrick) for securing this important debate.

With increased access to the internet, the exploitation of vulnerable children, predominantly young girls, has become easier for predators. Over the past few years, we have seen the rise of deepfakes on social media: the National Police Chiefs’ Council estimates that they have increased in prevalence by 1,780% between 2019 and 2024. Let me be clear: the toxic culture of misogynistic behaviour online is not banter. It is not free speech. It is abuse.

We know that the victims of online misogyny, abuse and exploitation are predominantly women and girls, so I welcome the Government’s bold action in making it a criminal offence to create or request the creation of non-consensual intimate images. How we respond to online abuse defines what kind of society we are and what kind of society we are prepared to be. We should be a society that stands up for dignity and equality for all women and girls.

The speed at which these images can be produced and shared is truly alarming. I worry that without social media platforms taking more responsibility to remove this content from their sites, we will never truly be rid of it. There needs to be more emphasis on stopping the predators who create the images and on ensuring that such images can be removed swiftly from sites to protect women and girls. That needs to be backed by legislation.

The answer should never be for girls and women to log off or stay quiet. Exploitation of women and girls online is not inevitable; it is a failure of choice and a failure of systems. If we have the power to design these systems, we have the responsibility to make them safe.