Tories join calls for inquiry into Mandelson
The Conservatives are also calling for a public inquiry into Peter Mandelson. This is what Alex Burghart, the shadow Cabinet Office minister, told Sky News this morning.
The government should hold a full inquiry into the public life of Peter Mandelson that touches on, not just what he was doing in 2009 [when he was in government and leaking some internal memos to Jeffrey Epstein], but also gets to the bottom of how he was appointed in the first place [as an ambassador]. Because when he was appointed, it was known that he had this long, unhealthy relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
The Lib Dems are also calling for an inquiry. (See 10.09am.)
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The Conservative are not backing calls for legislation to strip Peter Mandelson of his peerage, my colleague Jessica Elgot reports.
Understand Tories won’t create or back a bill to remove Mandelson’s peerage. There is unease among politicians in Westminster about the precedent of a government using its large majority to go after individuals, no matter how egregious. But mechanisms should still be there to expel him.
Former PM David Cameron accuses Labour of taking 'spite-laden wrecking ball' to Tories's free schools project
This afternoon peers will debate the children’s wellbeing and schools bill. David Cameron, the former prime minister, does not comment on domestic politics very often these days, but he has used a long article in the Daily Telegraph to condemn the bill, claiming that it will undermine one of his government’s key achievements.
Cameron says that, as opposition leader before 2010, he chose to back Tony Blair’s decision to roll out academy schools, even though the plans were controversial within Labour and it would have been easier for the Tories to oppose them. And Cameron says in government he went further, setting up free schools. He goes on:
And [free schools] are not a sideshow – there are over 750 of them, teaching 275,000 mainstream students. The results? Better than established state schools for reading, maths, GCSE results and A levels – 28.8 per cent of pupils at free schools go on to a top-third higher education destination, compared to 26.3 per cent at all state-funded mainstream schools.
The Starmer government’s response to all this has been to take a spite-laden wrecking ball to the entire project.
The next generation of free schools all budgeted and ready to go? Axed. 46 projects cancelled – 18 of them special schools, with a further 59 vital special and alternative provision projects hanging in the balance. Even my old school, Eton, had its Eton Star Academy in Middlesbrough cancelled. Labour’s message to aspirational parents and pupils in Middlesbrough? “Know your place.”
As for the academies, Labour are systematically dismantling the freedoms that helped them to succeed.
Responding to the Cameron article, a Labour source told the Telegraph that it was “the usual overwrought claptrap” and that the children’ wellbeing and schools bill would “drive improvement for every child in the country”.
The Department for Work and Pensions has named 12 disability experts with “lived experience of disability or long-term health conditions” who will sit on the steering group of the review looking at the future of the personal independence payment (Pip), a disability benefit. Stephen Timms, the minister leading the review, says:
Disabled people deserve a system that truly supports them to live with independence and dignity, and that fairly reflects the reality of their lives today.
That’s why we’re putting disabled people at the heart of this review – ensuring their voices shape the changes that will help them achieve better health, greater independence, and access to the right support when they need it.
The Conservatives have an opposition day debate scheduled for tomorrow, which means they get to choose the motion before the Commons. Sam Coates from Sky News says they may use it to force a vote on disclosure of vetting information relating to Peter Mandelson.
* Could we see a crunch point as soon as tomorrow over Mandelson?
* Tories have an opposition day debate - could they force a vote on Mandelson vetting disclosure. Shadow cabinet sources tell me they’re thinking about it
* Labour MPs tell me they COULD vote for it. They don’t think they can block transparency about Mandelson
* But some Labour MPs also want to use it to embarrass Morgan McSweeney. “If this vote gets rid of the ginger guy, we will go for it” said one Labour MP.
* Other Labour MPs are circling the wagons to protect McSweeney for getting Labour in government
No final decisions from Conservatives yet - but watch this space
Mandelson says government had 'serious wobble' last year about case for its Chagos Islands deal
In his Times interview with Katy Balls, Peter Mandelson also revealed that, after he was appointed ambassador to the US, the UK had a “serious wobble” about the case for the deal transferring sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius.
Balls reports:
One of Mandelson’s tasks as US ambassador was trying to get the administration onside over the Chagos Islands deal, which last month Trump denounced on social media and the UK government is trying to salvage. Mandelson was “mildly horrified” to see his work undone so spectacularly.
He worked hard to secure Republican backing for the deal. But just as it was coming together in the spring of 2025, he “became aware of a serious wobble in London over the agreement and its sellability to the British public.
“That was to do with the price tag and whether we had the total legal obligation to enter the deal and whether the original legal case made for the agreement in Whitehall was as watertight as was claimed. So on the one hand I faced a sceptical US administration and then at another point a wobbly government of my own behind me.”
The government seems to have got over its wobble. Keir Starmer defended the deal after Donald Trump attacked it last month, and in China last week he was telling journalists that the US intelligence agencies backed it too.
Children with cancer in England to have travel costs paid under government scheme
Karin Smyth, the secondary care minister, was giving interviews this morning to promote a government initiative that will ensure that families with children who have cancer in England will have treatment-related travel costs covered. PA Media reports:
The National Cancer Plan, which will be fully unveiled today, sets out how children and young people up to the age of 24 and their families will qualify for travel costs to and from appointments, regardless of income.
It is unclear whether there will be a cap on costs per family. The Department of Health said this will be looked at as the scheme is designed.
According to the Department of Health, the fund is part of a wider package to transform young people’s cancer care, with improvements to diagnosis, expanded genomic testing to better access to clinical trials and more psychological support.
Young cancer patients in hospital can also expect to be offered a better range of food suited to their tastes, including outside of mealtimes.
Charities welcomed the move, with Rachel Kirby-Rider, chief executive officer of Young Lives vs Cancer, saying: “Young Lives vs Cancer has been campaigning for almost a decade for a young cancer patient travel fund. Today’s announcement of dedicated travel costs support is a huge step forward in transforming the lives of children and young people with cancer and their families.
“Up until now, young people and families have been going into debt and even missing treatment because of the extra £250 every month just to travel to hospital. We’re ready to work with the Government to make this a success.”
What Met is doing in response to calls for Mandelson to face criminal investigation
Vikram Dodd is the Guardian’s police and crime correspondent.
What the Metropolitan police has announced in relation to Peter Mandelson is known within the force as a “scoping exercise”.
The announcement of a review is far from a definite decision that Britain’s biggest force will investigate Lord Mandelson.
But what they will now do is examine the material about Mandelson and see whether there is an apparent case that it breaks the law in England and Wales concerning misconduct in public office.
If the review or scoping exercise develops, detectives are likely to consult lawyers from the Crown Prosecution Service, which brings prosecutions in England and Wales.
The CPS says of misconduct in public office:
The offence concerns serious wilful abuse or neglect of the power or responsibilities of the public office held. There must be a direct link between the misconduct and an abuse of those powers or responsibilities.
The Met statement last night came from Cmdr Ella Marriott, who is attached to specialist crime. That is the same part of the Met whose review in December led to a decision that allegations against Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor that he had sex with a woman trafficked to London by Jeffrey Epstein did not merit a criminal investigation.
The Met says it is keen to stay out of party politics and the demands Mandelson face criminal investigation came from rival parties.
Tories join calls for inquiry into Mandelson
The Conservatives are also calling for a public inquiry into Peter Mandelson. This is what Alex Burghart, the shadow Cabinet Office minister, told Sky News this morning.
The government should hold a full inquiry into the public life of Peter Mandelson that touches on, not just what he was doing in 2009 [when he was in government and leaking some internal memos to Jeffrey Epstein], but also gets to the bottom of how he was appointed in the first place [as an ambassador]. Because when he was appointed, it was known that he had this long, unhealthy relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
The Lib Dems are also calling for an inquiry. (See 10.09am.)
Harman says Lords should pass motion saying Mandelson not welcome back, and he should be kicked off privy council
Harriet Harman, who was deputy Labour leader when Gordon Brown was prime minister, told the Today programme this morning that she always had her doubts about Peter Mandelson. “I was of the view that Peter Mandelson was untrustworthy from the 1990s,” she said.
As for what should happen now, Harman backed what No 10 was proposing yesterday, trying to ensure that Mandelson is permanently removed from the House of Lords.
But she also said that Starmer should be “advising the king to stop him from being a privy counsellor”.
She said that she would like to see the Lords pass a motion saying that Mandelson, who is currently on leave of absence from the house (which means he has temporarily suspended his membership, and cannot participate in its proceedings), would not be welcome if he applies to come back.
And, asked if she backed legislation to strip Mandelson of his peerage, Harman said this could be done alongside the wider reforms to Lords disciplinary process that Starmer wants to see. She said:
I don’t think it matters that a number of things are being done concurrently.
There is the police investigation, there’s the issue of his privy counsellorship, there’s the question of his readmission after temporary absence from the House of Lords, there’s the question of primary legislation to strip him of his title, but there’s also the question of changing the rules to make the House of Lords processes modern and much less cumbersome.
Alice Lilley from the Institute for Government thinktank has a good explainer here that sets out what needs to happen for someone to be removed from the House of Lords, and for them to lose their peerage.
Ed Davey calls for public inquiry into Mandelson
This is what Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, told the Today programme this morning about why he wants a public inquiry into Peter Mandelson, and particularly the claims that he leaked government documents to Jeffrey Epstein.
I certainly support a police investigation. It looks like crime has been committed, misconduct in public office, which is very serious, it impacts everyone’s lives if someone at the very top of government is betraying our country …
But I think we need to think even more deeply about this. I think the case for a public inquiry into national security, and indeed the British victims of Jeffrey Epstein, has now become a requirement.
This is so serious in the impact it has on how we govern ourselves, as well as, of course, the victims, that I think the case for a public inquiry is now overwhelming.
Davey also said he did not accept that it would be too difficult or time-consuming to pass legislation to strip Mandelson of his peerage. “We should strip Lord Mandelson of his peerage, and we can do that today. It’s a very short bill just to focus on Lord Mandelson,” he said.
In a news release, Davey offered more details about why he thinks a public inquiry is needed. He said:
Epstein was leaked highly market-sensitive information by a minister acting as a mole in Whitehall, leaving our institutions dangerously exposed and posing a grave threat to national security.
A full public inquiry with powers to compel witnesses and access messages and emails is essential. Only complete transparency can restore public trust, deliver justice for victims and prevent this level of corruption from ever happening again.
Davey may be overstating his case. Although there is evidence that Mandelson leaked confidential government information to Epstein relating to economic policy, there is no evidence (yet?) of him doing anything that directly threatened national security.
Mandelson denies being drawn to people like Epstein just because they are rich
Here are some more extracts from Katy Balls’ interview with Peter Mandelson in the Times (mostly conducted early last week, before the latest Jeffrey Epstein revelations). (See 9.13am.)
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Mandleson says he was “naive” in his dealings with Epstein. He says:
I don’t know what [Epstein’s] motives were – probably mixed – but he provided guidance to help me navigate out of the world of politics and into the world of commerce and finance.
Perhaps he wanted to be a mentor and I was naive in regarding him as a good-faith actor. There was no reason to shun his advice, but I was too trusting. He was always very free and forthright with his views and always presented them as in my best interests.
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Mandelson denies being drawn to people just because they are rich. Asked if he had a lapse of judgment when it came to rich people, he replies:
That is a bit of an occupational hazard for a leading politician or a European commissioner, as I was. I don’t think I am drawn towards rich people so much as rich people have big personalities, a lot of knowledge and a lot of experience to share. I hoover that up, but not because they’re wealthy. It’s because of what they do and what they’ve learnt and the responsibilities they’ve exercised, not the size of their bank accounts.
Asked what did draw him to Epstein, he replies:
He was a classic sociopath. Outwardly, completely charming and engaging. He was very clever.
He also says Epstein gave good dinner parties.
I remember one of the two dinner parties of his I went to. I sat next to someone in charge of brain research at Harvard. I was sitting opposite the founders of Google. At the other end of the table was Bill Gates. I think I also brushed past Noam Chomsky on a later date, but he wasn’t having much to do with me given that he was a Marxist philosopher and I was a Blairite.
(Epstein, of course, is better known for the other kinds of parties he used to host, but there is nothing in the interview about those.)
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Mandelson denies not being frank with No 10 about his relations with Epstein prior to being appointed ambassador to the US – claiming that the emails that triggered his sacking were ones even he did not remember.
Downing Street did not know what I had long since forgotten. It was a distant chapter from which I have very little recall and have no access at all to records or a diary,” he says. “I understand being surprised by what they learnt, but quite honestly I too am amazed by some of the conversations I had and areas of my life where I was seeking advice from Epstein.
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Mandelson says he accepts that it was a mistake for his husband, Reinaldo, to accept £10,000 from Epstein to do an osteopathy course. “In retrospect, it was clearly a lapse in our collective judgment for Reinaldo to accept this offer. At the time it was not a consequential decision,” he says.
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He says there would be no point in his giving evidence to Congress about Epstein.
There is nothing I can tell Congress about Epstein they don’t already know. I had no exposure to the criminal aspects of his life. For so many years the voices of his victims were not heard and now Congress has rightly opened everything up.
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He says being sacked as ambassador to the US was “felt like being killed without actually dying”.
Minister denounces Mandelson for interview in which he claims outrage about his Epstein links ‘disproportionate'
Good morning. Keir Starmer tried to assuage public and political outrage about Lord Mandelson yesterday by saying that he would like to see him kicked out of the House of Lords for good, but that is not enough for the many people saying that the government should pass primary legislation to remove his peerage. One of them is Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, who told Radio 4 this morning a “very short bill” could be passed “today”. As Jessica Elgot and Emine Sinmaz report in our overnight story, it may turn out that Mandelson ultimately gets punished by the criminal justice system, because the police are reviewing the evidence to see if it justifies a full inquiry.
Davey is also calling for a public inquiry into Mandelson. Harriet Harman, the former Labour deputy leader, has been saying Mandelson should be kicked off the privy council. I’ll quote more from what they, and others, have been saying about ‘what to do about Mandelson’ shortly.
But the most interesting words about Mandelson around this morning come from the man himself. The Times has published a long interview with the peer and former ambassador conducted by Katy Balls. Balls is based in Washington, but she interviewed him at his home in Wiltshire early last week, for what looks like what was originally planned as a magazine feature. But then she also spoke to him on Sunday night, after the release of another 3m Jeffrey Epstein documents led to fresh revelations about his friendship with Mandelson and after the peer resigned from the Labour party as a consequence.
What is striking about the interview is lack of contrition.
In what seems to be a line from the main, pre-Sunday interview (which focused on the September Epstein revelations that led to his being sacked as ambassador to the US) Mandelson says:
Hiding under a rock would be a disproportionate response to a handful of misguided historical emails, which I deeply regret sending. If it hadn’t been for the emails, I’d still be in Washington. Emails sent all those years ago didn’t change the relationship that I had with this monster.
But Balls also quotes him as saying:
I feel the same about the recent download of Epstein files, none of which indicate wrongdoing or misdemeanour on my part.
This quote seems to come from the Sunday chat, but the article is not clear on this point.
Balls also says that on Sunday, after announcing that he was resigning his Labour membership, Mandelson was still talking about making a future contribution to public life. He said:
I am a New Labour person and always will be, wherever the party situates itself. But I think I want a sea change. I want to be more of an outsider looking in rather than the other way round. I want to contribute ideas that enable Britain to strengthen and to work for all, in every part of the country.
Karin Smyth, the secondary care minister, was on the interview round for the government this morning, and she was asked about the Times article. She said Mandelson still did not seem to understand what he had done wrong. She told the Today programme:
Like, sadly, many other men I’ve seen in similar positions over the years, there is a lack of real reality and understanding about the depth of this now demonstrated in that interview.
I’m not entirely sure what day that interview took place, but each hour is bringing really shocking and quite astonishing levels of email correspondence that is shocking absolutely everybody.
The realisation has to dawn on him about what that means.
I will quote more from the Mandelson interview shortly.
Here is the agenda for the day.
Morning: Keir Starmer chairs cabinet.
11.30am: David Lammy, the justice secretary and deputy PM, takes justice questions in the Commons.
Noon: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.
After 12.30pm: MPs debate the universal credit (removal of two-child limit) bill.
2pm: Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, and Lee Anderson, the Reform MP, hold a press conference. They are announcing a plan to save pubs.
Late afternoon: Peers debate the children’s wellbeing and schools bill, and are due to vote on an amendment to ban mobile phones from schools.
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