Summary

  • Keir Starmer will face MPs for a second time this week as the row over Lord Mandelson's vetting continues

  • It'll be a PMQs where it's not just what the Tory leader asks that matters, but also the mood among Labour MPs, writes our chief political correspondent

  • Yesterday, sacked Foreign Office chief Olly Robbins told MPs that No 10 had put "constant pressure" on the Foreign Office over Mandelson - watch this recap of the evidence session

  • He also said Downing Street had taken a "dismissive attitude" to vetting - the government has denied the claims, saying it was reasonable to ask for updates on the appointment

  • Mandelson was announced as the UK's ambassador to the US in December 2024, before undergoing in-depth vetting to obtain his required security clearance for the role

  • He was sacked less than a year later after new details emerged about the extent of his friendship with the late convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein

  1. Robbins was 'treated shamefully' - former senior civil servantpublished at 09:22 BST

    Simon Gass

    Olly Robbins has been "treated shamefully", according to a former senior civil servant.

    Simon Gass, a former political director at the Foreign Office, tells BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "There is a public servant who is extraordinarily capable... and who absolutely believed that he was following the correct procedure."

    He describes Robbins's dismissal from the Foreign Office as "unjust, but also I think it is a big mistake".

    Gass adds: "The government appears to be asking us to believe that if they had been told that vetting had been difficult but a workaround had been found... they still might have stopped [Mandelson's] appointment to Washington.

    "I don't think that that is credible."

  2. Ambassador job for Starmer aide would not have been 'appropriate', minister sayspublished at 09:10 BST

    Pat McFadden says it would not have been appropriate for Lord Matthew Doyle - a former head of communications in No 10 - to have been given a diplomatic position.

    It comes after Olly Robbins said during his evidence to MPs yesterday that there had been enquiries from Downing Street about a diplomatic role for Doyle, a Starmer aide - read more about that here.

    The ex-communications chief was made a Labour peer after leaving Downing Street in March 2025, but was suspended from the parliamentary party this February over his links with a convicted sex offender - which he has apologised for.

    Work and Pensions Secretary McFadden tells the Today programme he agrees that such an appointment would not have been appropriate, saying of Doyle "I don't think he would have had the qualifications to do that".

    Asked whether it was Starmer probing about a prospective job, McFadden says: "I can't tell you the details of this because I only heard about them yesterday through Olly Robbins's evidence, but I do agree with the foreign secretary when she says this would not have been appropriate."

    He adds: "Matthew Doyle himself has said that he knew nothing about this."

  3. Starmer 'acted fairly' by sacking Robbins - ministerpublished at 09:00 BST

    Pat McFadden speaking into microphone with headphones on in Today studio

    More now from Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden.

    Asked on BBC Radio 4's Today programme about the sacking of Olly Robbins, he says that Starmer has "acted fairly in these circumstances".

    He says this is because the prime minister should have been given information related to Mandelson's vetting.

    The minister says the "rationale" behind Mandelson's initial appointment as US ambassador was that the UK was "dealing with a highly political US administration of a different character from previous administrations" - where "trade would be at the heart of the relationship".

    McFadden says Mandelson "wasn't plucked from obscurity or disgrace" but rather appointed because he was a "political operator and someone with trade experience".

    He adds that Starmer "isn't someone who knew Peter Mandelson well", which is "all the more reason" to share details of the vetting process with the prime minister. "This wasn't some deep relationship."

  4. 'Robbins unilaterally decided to disregard the red flags', says former No 10 comms directorpublished at 08:45 BST

    James Lyons walking into Downing StreetImage source, PA Media

    Olly Robbins, the former top civil servant at the Foreign Office, "unilaterally decided to disregard red flags" around Mandelson's appointment as US ambassador "and didn't tell a soul about it", according to a former communications director at No 10.

    James Lyons - who served in the role under Keir Starmer for seven months last year - tells BBC Radio 4's Today programme that during yesterday's hearing Robbins was "violently agreeing with the prime minister" and proving that claims that Starmer lied to parliament about the vetting are "completely untrue".

    • As a reminder, here's what Robbins said during almost two-and-a-half hours of evidence to MPs on the Foreign Affairs committee on Tuesday

    Nonetheless, Lyons says that the prime minister finds himself in a "very serious" situation over Mandelson: "The Prince of Darkness is haunting the prime minister and this administration."

    He adds: "It's certainly true that the government have struggled to get ahead of the Peter Mandelson scandal."

    Mandelson was sacked in September last year after new details emerged about the extent of his friendship with the late convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. He has since said he regretted ever having known Epstein. See the timeline below for more on what we know about their friendship.

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  5. Former head of civil service calls for sacked Foreign Office boss to be reinstatedpublished at 08:21 BST

    Henry Zeffman
    Chief political correspondent

    Olly Robbins should be reinstated as permanent secretary of the Foreign Office, a former head of the civil service says.

    Lord Sedwill, who served as the cabinet secretary from 2018 to 2020 and is also a former national security adviser, said that the prime minister should “retract his accusations” against Robbins.

    In a letter to The Times newspaper, Sedwill wrote:

    “In his evidence to the foreign affairs committee, Sir Olly Robbins displayed the calm integrity and intelligence which have characterised his distinguished career of public service.

    “The prime minister appointed Peter Mandelson against official advice, announced that appointment without security vetting having been completed and claims that he would have changed his mind had he been told that the vetting process had raised the concerns about Mandelson’s previous conduct of which he was already well aware.

    “As Robbins explained yesterday, the question for him was not whether to tell the prime minister what he already knew, but whether those issues could be mitigated enough to allow Mandelson access to the secret intelligence necessary to do his job. He made the professional judgment that they could. Unwisely as it turned out, he shouldered his responsibilities rather than shunting them.

    “The prime minister should retract his accusations against Olly Robbins and reinstate him to the job the country needs him to do of getting the diplomatic service into shape for the second quarter of the 21st century.”

  6. Robbins 'made the judgement' not to tell PM about Mandelson security vetting, says ministerpublished at 08:02 BST

    Pat McFadden sits in front of the BBC Breakfast backdrop, which shows the Palace of Westminster. He is wearing a dark coloured suit and a striped red tie.

    Olly Robbins "made the judgement" that he did not have to tell Keir Starmer about Lord Mandelson not clearing security vetting, says the work and pensions secretary.

    Pat McFadden tells BBC Breakfast that while the call made by Robbins was likely "in good faith", it ultimately led to the prime minister losing confidence in him.

    McFadden also told Breakfast that while he was the minister in charge of the Cabinet Office at the time Robbins said the department signalled there was no need to vet Mandelson, he had "no involvement in any such signal being sent".

  7. Watch: Robbins saga sends 'chill' through civil service, union boss sayspublished at 07:51 BST

    Media caption,

    Watch: PM accused of 'sending a real chill throughout the civil service'

    The way Prime Minister Keir Starmer sacked Olly Robbins sends a "real chill throughout the civil service," says the boss of the the FDA trade union.

    Dave Penman is the general secretary of the FDA trade union - which represents civil servants across the UK.

    He told the BBC's Newsnight: "I think the prime minister is losing the ability to work with the civil service."

    "Who in the civil service would now think they would be immune from when it is politically expedient to be dismissed?" Penman asked.

    "That's not a place any government wants to be because it doesn't deliver for the people of the country," Penman added.

  8. Analysis

    Starmer struggling to escape Mandelson rowpublished at 07:37 BST

    Chris Mason
    Political editor

    Keir Starmer and Peter Mandelson pictured in February 2025Image source, PA Media

    This is the seventh day in a row that the self-inflicted damage of the Lord Mandelson saga has rained down on Keir Starmer, and this element of it over the last week is but a chapter in the wider story.

    The minutiae of the prime minister's most politically consequential decision in office are now being forensically dissected and, frequently, in public.

    At the select committee, in the Commons and in the press.

    The building blocks of a judgement call Starmer now acknowledges he got catastrophically wrong are being scrutinised daily.

    So much for the grid of announcements and campaign events Labour folk in Scotland, Wales and in the areas of England with council elections would love to be focused on. Instead, there is incessant conversation about Lord Mandelson.

    And Olly Robbins - who was dumped on by Downing Street from a prime ministerial height over the last few days - responded with a modestly expressed assault on its judgement, sense of fairness and proportion.

    Granted, they have been gunning for his judgement too, in a circular firing squad about credibility.

    With Prime Minister's Questions at lunchtime and the prospect in the coming weeks of the next deluge of documents relating to Lord Mandelson's appointment being published, this is a foul-up Starmer is struggling to escape.

    You can read more analysis from our political editor here.

  9. Analysis

    Pressure on Starmer as he prepares for PMQs while Mandelson row continuespublished at 07:21 BST

    Henry Zeffman
    Chief political correspondent

    Some weeks it’s hard to predict what Kemi Badenoch will ask about at Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs). This is not one of those weeks.

    She will presumably seize on the elements of Olly Robbins’s evidence yesterday where he described the pressure from No 10 to approve and expedite Lord Mandelson’s appointment.

    No 10 denies that they put pressure on the Foreign Office. There is also an important nuance here which is that Robbins’s argument is that he withstood the pressure, and that his decision to approve Mandelson’s security clearance was unrelated to the pressure he felt.

    His accusation matters nevertheless, because at the core of why Keir Starmer professes to be so angry now is that he says he would have cancelled the appointment of Mandelson had he known about the vetting concerns.

    Robbins, on the other hand, describes a No 10 so determined to press ahead with the appointment that it was even mooted at one point that there be no vetting at all.

    Those two accounts are hard to reconcile.

    This morning, Starmer’s team is drawing some comfort from the fact that Emily Thornberry, the Labour MP who chaired yesterday’s hearing, has backed Starmer’s decision to sack Robbins, saying he should have told No 10 more details of the vetting process.

    Dan Carden, another Labour MP on the committee, takes a different view. He’s said Robbins was “put in an impossible position” and has “had the goalposts moved”, adding: “Why he was sacked... still needs answering”.

    It will be a PMQs where it’s not just what Badenoch asks that matters, but also the mood among Labour MPs sitting behind Starmer while he answers.

  10. Watch: What did Olly Robbins say yesterday?published at 07:08 BST

    Olly Robbins spent almost two-and-a-half hours giving evidence to MPs on the Foreign Affairs committee on Tuesday.

    Here is a reminder of the key things that he said:

    • Robbins told MPs yesterday that when he began the top job in the Foreign Office in January 2025, there was "already a very very strong expectation" from No 10 that Mandelson "needed to be in post" as quickly as possible
    • He spoke of a "dismissive" attitude in Number 10 to Mandelson's vetting, but insisted that his department followed the process "rigorously"
    • He told MPs that he was briefed that the body that conducts vetting considered Mandelson a "borderline case" and were "leaning towards" recommending that clearance be denied
    • Asked about the impact on the government if Mandelson's clearance had been denied, Robbins said: "I think it would have been very difficult indeed"

    Media caption,

    Watch key moments from sacked Foreign Office chief's testimony

  11. Robbins's questioning was an 'extraordinary' session, says committee memberpublished at 07:01 BST

    Sir John Whittingdale sits in a room with white walls and a white door. He is wearing a striped shirt and a dark coloured tie.

    A member of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee says he understands why Olly Robbins may feel "angry and upset" by his dismissal.

    John Whittingdale tells BBC Breakfast that Tuesday's meeting of the committee was an "extraordinary session", later adding that Lord Mandelson should never have been appointed as the UK ambassador to Washington "in the first place".

    Asked whether he agrees that Robbins should have been sacked, Whittingdale says that he does not, and goes on to say: "I understand why he feels angry and upset by that, and that was apparent when he was giving evidence to us yesterday."

    Whittingdale adds: "We still don't know why it was that the prime minister was so determined to appoint somebody to this incredibly important position who was so obviously the wrong person to be in it."

  12. How the Mandelson row got to this pointpublished at 06:45 BST

    Questions over who knew what and when about the appointment of Lord Mandelson as US ambassador continue to be asked, seven months after his sacking from the top job in Washington.

    Here's a reminder of how this row has played out:

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  13. Starmer to face fresh questions from MPs after Robbins's evidencepublished at 06:40 BST

    Keir Starmer will face fresh questions from MPs later today, after Olly Robbins's evidence to MPs over Lord Mandelson's vetting for the US ambassador job.

    Wednesday's Prime Minister's Questions session comes after Robbins - former top civil servant in the Foreign Office - accused Downing Street of taking a "dismissive attitude" to vetting during Mandelson's appointmentto the Washington post.

    He also said that there was "constant pressure" to get Mandelson into the job.

    Robbins was sacked last week after it emerged that the peer had been sent on the diplomatic mission despite officials raising security concerns, without telling Starmer.

    The PM will be in the Commons from 12:00 BST, but stick with us as we bring you all of the latest updates and analysis.

    Keir Starmer pictured at the British Museum on TuesdayImage source, PA Media
    Image caption,

    Starmer will face questions from MPs at 12:00 BST