What happened More than 1,000 pages of documents relating to the appointment of Peter Mandelson as Britain’s ambassador to the US have been released, revealing sharp criticism of the government. The papers include messages showing Mandelson questioning the direction of Keir Starmer’s administration and expressing doubts about the prime minister’s political strength. Large sections of the material were redacted or withheld, prompting opposition MPs to accuse ministers of lacking transparency.
Who said what In private exchanges, Mandelson wrote that Labour’s difficulties “stem from the top and Keir lacks verve”. He also described Downing Street as “beleaguered and bereft”, and in need of a major reset.
The files reveal that the Labour party is “riddled with doubts and infighting”, said Kiran Stacey in The Guardian. “Starmer’s weakness has now been exposed,” said The Telegraph’s editorial board. Throughout the releases is an “unmistakable concern Sir Keir lacks leadership skills and that his Government is drifting aimlessly”.
What next? The latest Mandelson files may “give us gossip and intrigue”, said The Independent’s editorial board, but they “leave us no closure”. Most significantly, they “tell us next to nothing about why Mandelson was ever considered an appropriate candidate for HM ambassador to Washington”. Consequently, the Mandelson affair is not over, but “will drag on and distract the government for weeks, if not months, to come”.
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