This is offensive wibble.
"The government" absolutely does care about protecting children, evidenced by the hard work done by children's services teams up and down the country. The government is only faceless if you don't want to look - the childcare professionals working endless hours with troubled children and families absolutely do have faces, and they're some of the kindest and selfless people you could hope to meet. No man/child/family is an island, and so this idea of parents being the protection not the government is not just wrong, it's dangerous. There are countless terrible cases up and down the country where it's the parents doing the abusing. Or even the more benign cases where the parents are struggling through circumstance or mental health and appreciate the help. What then if the government can't/shouldn't help?
And I presume you're referencing what happened in Rochdale, which is rightly a horrific scandal and should never have happened. But it doens't mean the government doesn't care. It means some of the people working for it are incompetent/corrupt/evil.
This bill is terrible for all sorts of reasons, but holding execs personally accountable when they break the law isn't one of them.