Gordon Brown calls for inquiry into ‘shocking’ leaking by Mandelson of government information when he was PM

Gordon Brown, who was prime minister when Peter Mandelson passed at least one confidential memo addressed to him to Jeffrey Epstein (see 12.41pm), has described the leak as “shocking” and written to the cabinet secretary demanding an inquiry.

In a statement, Brown says:

I have today asked the cabinet secretary to investigate the disclosure of confidential and market sensitive information from the then business department during the global financial crisis.
On September 10 last year, I wrote to the cabinet secretary to ask him to investigate the veracity of information contained in the Epstein papers about the sale of assets arising from the banking collapse and communications about them between Lord Mandelson and Mr Epstein.
That enquiry led to a response on November 19 that no departmental record could be found of any information or communication from Lord Mandelson to Mr Epstein on these issues.

Given the shocking new information that has come to light in the latest tranche of Epstein papers, including information about the transfer to Mr Epstein of at least one highly sensitive government document as well as other highly confidential information, I have now written to ask for a wider and more intensive inquiry to take place into the wholly unacceptable disclosure of government papers and information during the period when the country was battling the global financial crisis.

Given the public interest in this, I have asked that the results of the inquiry be published and done so as soon as possible.

Brown and Mandelson was close friends and allies in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when New Labour was taking shape. They fell out bitterly when Mandelson backed Tony Blair, not Brown, for Labour leader in 1994. In 2008 Brown stunned Westminster when he persuaded Mandelson to quit his job as a European commissioner and return to cabinet. The two men had a good working relationship until the 2010 election, but then fell out again over who was to blame for Labour’s defeat.

The revelation that Brown asked for an investigation in September last year into potential leaking by Mandelson is new. Brown says he was told that “no departmental record could be found of any information or communication from Lord Mandelson to Mr Epstein on these issues”. But that is not surprising, and it suggests the investigation was not very thorough. When cabinet ministers leak information, they tend not to use their work email accounts.

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