Home news Starmer says he has confidence in Peter Mandelson amid calls to sack him over Epstein ties – UK politics live | Politics

Starmer says he has confidence in Peter Mandelson amid calls to sack him over Epstein ties – UK politics live | Politics

by wellnessfitpro

PMQs – snap verdict

That is the first PMQs that Kemi Badenoch can clearly be said to have “won”. She has held her own with Keir Starmer quite often, but in any discussion on domestic policy she is at a colossal disadvantage, because the record of the previous Tory government is so poor. Even a first-rate parliamentarian would struggle with the deck of cards she has been dealt, and she is not in that league.

But today Badenoch had an easy target, and she clobbered it effectively. As Tony Blair discovered (twice – there were two resignations), defending Peter Mandelson is sometimes just impossible. Both of those incidents involved Mandelson’s dealings with the wealthy, but by the standards of today’s scandals they were relatively innocuous. Jeffrey Epstein’s moral depravity was on a wholly different scale. No wonder Starmer was wriggling.

Badenoch started by asking Starmer what he knew about the Mandelson/Epstein friendship when he appointed him ambassador to the US. Starmer brushed this off with a routine answer about due process, and Badenoch then followed that up with a reference to a complicated story in today’s Telegraph about Epstein being consulted by Mandelson over the sale of a business part owned by the UK government, when Mandelson was dealing with it in his capacity as business secretary and after Epstein had been convicted of child sex offences. She said:

The Daily Telegraph reports today, that while Lord Mandelson was business secretary, he brokered a deal with Jeffrey Epstein, while he was business secretary. And that this occurred after Epstein had been convicted of child sex offences. Given this new information, does the prime minister really think it is tenable for our ambassador to remain in post?

Starmer continued to rely on the “due process” defence, but it was not really working and eventually he resorted to accusing Badenoch of messing up her questions last week, when she failed to interrogate him much on Angela Rayner. Starmer’s best moment came in his final answer.

Our deputy leader contest started this week and ends on October 25. Their leadership contest has been going on for months.

But by then the damage had been done.

Does this matter much? It is hard to say at this point. Mandelson isn’t ambassador to the Vatican. He was appointed to establish a good relationship with Donald Trump, who isn’t an Epstein-type paedophile sex trafficker but who isn’t a moral paragon either, and by all accounts Mandelson is doing that part of the job remarkably well.

But the Epstein association is utterly corrosive. (Even Trump, who is shameless in most things, can recognise this, which presumably is why he has been willing to defy his Maga base over the Epstein files.) Starmer did not sound overly-supportive of Mandelson, and so it is possible a slew of further revelations could cut short his Washington career. If that were to happen, Badenoch would claim the scalp.

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Key events

RMT leader urges Sadiq Khan to convene summit to resolve London Tube strike

The leader of striking Tube workers has called for a summit to try to resolve a dispute over pay and working hours, PA Media reports. PA says:

Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) are taking industrial action this week which has crippled London Underground services, causing travel chaos in the capital.

RMT general secretary Eddie Dempsey called on the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, to attend a summit with the union in a bid to find a resolution.

Speaking at the TUC Congress in Brighton, Dempsey told delegates: “I’ve got a message for the mayor. Instead of going on social media, instead of the old tired cliches, telling trades unionists to get round the table, you’re the mayor of London, you’re the chair of Transport for London. Stop going on social media, invite us to the meeting, let’s have a discussion, because I want to know what is going on in London.”

Dempsey warned of more strike action if there was no resolution to the dispute, adding: “We take no pleasure in causing disruption but we make no apology for fighting for our members. So if the mayor has any sense, he will reach out to us.”

The union has rejected a 3.4% pay offer and is campaigning for a cut in their members’ 35-hour week, which London Underground says is unaffordable.

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