Embattled UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, on Monday, faced lawmakers in the Parliament as he attempts to contain growing outrage over a persistent scandal involving Peter Mandelson, a long-time associate of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Starmer, whose popularity has waned among the public and within his own Labour Party, is battling to maintain control as the controversy threatens his leadership. Pressure intensified last week after reports revealed that Mandelson was appointed Britain’s ambassador to the United States in late 2024 despite allegedly failing security vetting checks.
The prime minister has admitted regret over the appointment, insisting he and other senior officials were not informed of the failed clearance, describing the oversight as “unforgivable.”
Starmer is expected to address the issue in a statement to the House of Commons on Monday afternoon before facing questions from MPs.
In response to the fallout, Starmer has blamed officials at the Foreign Office for allowing the appointment to proceed against security advice. He has since dismissed the department’s top civil servant, Olly Robbins.
However, former civil servants have criticised the move, accusing the prime minister of scapegoating Robbins. The former official is due to present his own account before a parliamentary committee on Tuesday, in what is shaping up to be a critical week for Starmer’s nearly two-year tenure.
Opposition figures have called for Starmer’s resignation, accusing him of incompetence and potentially misleading parliament and the public. The controversy is further complicated by Starmer’s earlier assurance to parliament in February that “full due process” had been followed in Mandelson’s vetting.
Downing Street maintains that statement remains valid, arguing that existing rules allowed the Foreign Office to override vetting concerns without informing the prime minister or his senior team.
In an unusual move, the prime minister’s office released a memo on Friday stating that Starmer only became aware of the vetting failure last week. Senior ministers, including Technology Secretary Liz Kendall and Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy, have defended him, insisting Mandelson would not have been appointed had proper clearance issues been known.
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