A growing movement of youth safety campaigners in the United Kingdom is demanding urgent reform of laws surrounding grooming, following a deeply personal testimony from a teenager identified only as Vincent. The 16 year old told a parliamentary select committee that his parents ‘never say he’s good enough’, a statement that has been seized upon by child welfare advocates as evidence of a systemic failure in how society protects young people from exploitation.
Vincent’s case is not isolated. Data from the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) shows a 23% increase in calls related to emotional abuse since 2019, with parental approval conditional on academic or behavioural performance. Campaigners argue that this psychological vulnerability is the breeding ground for grooming, where predators exploit a child’s need for validation.
The current legal framework, primarily under the Sexual Offences Act 2003, defines grooming as a preparatory act with the intent to sexually assault a child. But advocates say this definition is too narrow. “Grooming begins long before any sexual act,” said Dr. Helena Vance, Science & Climate Correspondent. She is not a child psychologist, but the data are clear: the emotional void left by insufficient parental affirmation makes children susceptible to external validation from abusers.
Claire Miles, director of the youth advocacy group SafeSteps, testified alongside Vincent. “We have a generation of children who are starving for praise,” she said. “When a predator offers them attention, it fills a gap that parents have left. The law must recognise that emotional neglect is a form of harm that facilitates grooming.”
The campaign’s three core demands are: first, to expand the legal definition of grooming to include the manipulation of emotional needs; second, to mandate school-based programmes that teach children about healthy validation; and third, to impose penalties on parents who fail to provide “adequate positive reinforcement” under a new duty of care.
Critics argue that the latter would constitute state overreach. The Family Education Trust described the proposal as “Orwellian”, warning that it could criminalise parents for ordinary disciplinary practices. But supporters counter that the current system allows predators to exploit children whose parents cannot or will not meet their emotional needs.
Vincent’s testimony has particularly resonated. He told the committee that his parents only ever focused on his shortcomings. “I got an A on my maths test, and they asked why it wasn’t an A-star,” he said. “When I won a writing competition, they said my grammar was still poor. I feel like I’ll never be enough.” It was only when a man in his late 20s began messaging him on social media, repeatedly telling him how talented and mature he was, that Vincent felt valued. That man has since been charged with child sexual abuse.
The case has accelerated calls for reform. Labour MP Sarah Owen, chair of the Women and Equalities Committee, said: “Vincent’s story is a wake up call. The law must adapt to the reality of modern grooming, which preys on emotional voids.”
Statistically, one in four children in the UK report feeling that their parents do not think they are good enough, according to a 2023 survey by the charity Childline. Among children who have been groomed, that figure rises to three in four. These numbers suggest a direct correlation between parental affirmation and vulnerability to exploitation.
As the campaign gathers momentum, it faces the challenge of balancing child protection with parental autonomy. But for Vincent and thousands like him, the stakes are clear. “I need the law to protect me from the people who want to take advantage of my emptiness,” he said. “And I need my parents to fill that emptiness instead.”
The government has yet to respond formally to the proposals, but Downing Street sources indicate that the Education Secretary is reviewing the role of schools in identifying emotionally vulnerable children. The Home Office is also examining whether grooming offences should be updated to include psychological manipulation as a separate charge.
The coming months will determine whether Vincent’s plea translates into legislative action. But his words have already sparked a national conversation about the kind of affirmation children need, and the cost when it is withheld.











