Earlier today, the House of Commons of the British Parliament rejected the Conservative Party’s proposal to start an investigation by the Ethics Committee of the Parliament into whether Prime Minister Keir Starmer had violated the rules of the Parliament with his conduct when Lord Peter Mandelson was appointed ambassador to the United States.
The debate in the lower house lasted for five hours before the vote was taken, and 335 MPs voted against it and 223 voted for it. The proposal was therefore defeated, and votes will have mostly fallen along party lines. However, several MPs from the Labor Party, who are considered to be on the left wing, voted in favor of the proposal.
Kemi Badenoch, leader of the Conservative Party, laid heavy blame on Starmer in her speech.
AFP/British Parliament
Kemi Badenoch, the leader of the Conservative Party, made it clear during the debate that the correct procedures had not been followed in Mandelson’s case, and that Starmer had not informed Parliament correctly of what was known in previous discussions about the case.
Starmer said the case was a political stunt in the run-up to local elections in May.
Tough case for Starmer
Mandelson was removed from his post last September when it was revealed that he had had a much longer and closer relationship with the tycoon and child abuser Jeffrey Epstein than he had previously admitted.
The case is considered the most embarrassing for Starmer, who is said to have lobbied hard for Mandelson to be appointed, but he was supposed to be able to pay for better relations between Britain and US President Donald Trump.
Recently, it emerged that Mandelson had failed security clearance, which all British diplomats must go through, but the reasons for this turned out to be his minor business ties with the Chinese and not anything related to Epstein.
Starmer sacked Olly Robbins, the UK Foreign Office’s secretary of state, earlier this month for failing to tell ministers that Mandelson had failed the certification.
David McSweeney, former chief of staff at 10 Downing Street, told a parliamentary committee earlier today that he had made a mistake when he advised the prime minister to make Mandelson, who has a checkered career in British politics, as ambassador.















