Summary

  • More than 1,000 pages of documents relating to Lord Mandelson's appointment as the UK's ambassador to the US have been published

  • We're going through the files and messages now, and will bring you the key lines

  • In a handwritten letter, sent to then-Foreign Secretary David Lammy, Mandelson said if he was appointed: "I would make sure you never regret it"

  • Another disclosure shows Mandelson "declined to comply" with a Cabinet Office request to hand over "any information held on his personal phone"

  • Earlier, No 10 said "every government department" had been involved in going through the documents and the release would provide "unprecedented" transparency

  • Keir Starmer appointed Mandelson in December 2024, but sacked him nine months later after new details about his relationship with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein emerged - how we got here

  • MPs passed a binding vote earlier this year to ensure the files would be published - the first release in March showed Starmer was warned Mandelson's relationship with Epstein posed a "general reputation risk"

  • Mandelson is under criminal investigation over allegations of misconduct in public office and has repeatedly let it be known that he believes he has not acted criminally, did not act for personal gain and is co-operating with police

  1. Mandelson said the government generally 'doesn't do policy well enough'published at 14:56 BST

    In a WhatsApp message exchange between Lord Mandelson and pensions minister Torsten Bell, Mandelson says "the government doesn’t do policy, generally speaking, well enough”.

    In the July 2025 exchange, Bell asks Mandelson which government he is referring to, to which the then-ambassador says: "Our government!"

    Swansea West MP Bell then replies: "Well that is definitely true - everyone seems to think it's someone else's job to get the policy right... which is very odd."

    Mandelson then says: "As the saying goes, rubbish in rubbish out..."

  2. Peter Kyle praised 'good advice' from Mandelson on AIpublished at 14:49 BST

    Jack Fenwick
    Political correspondent

    The Business Secretary Peter Kyle said he would "action" advice from Lord Mandelson to include "more positive language about AI" at the start of a speech at a major international security conference.

    On 8 February 2025, Mandelson told Kyle, who was then the government’s technology secretary, that his speech would "benefit from more positive language about AI up front before you get into the security stuff".

    Kyle replied: "That's all v good advice which I'll action. Thank you."

    Six days later Kyle gave a speech at the Munich Security Conference in which he said "in the UK, we reject the doomsayers and the pessimists" about artificial intelligence.

  3. Mandelson told former transport secretary her resignation 'seems harsh'published at 14:44 BST

    One message exchange shows Lord Mandelson commiserating with former transport secretary Louise Haigh, when she resigned from the prime minister's Cabinet after it emerged she pleaded guilty to a fraud offence a decade ago.

    "Lou, I am very sorry about this," he says in a WhatsApp sent on 29 November 2024 - the day of her resignation.

    "You have been brave and loyal in your decision but it seems harsh given you were appointed in full knowledge."

    "But you have acted in a way that enables you to come back later and everything you say and do now should be done with that in mind. Strong and honourable," he adds.

    Haigh replies: "Thank you Peter, that was a really kind message."

  4. Mandelson refused to hand over his WhatsApp messages to government, files showpublished at 14:43 BST
    Breaking

    Joe Pike
    Political correspondent

    Peter Mandelson refused to hand over his own WhatsApp messages to the government, the files show.

    The explanatory notes at the start of the document dump explains that "on 31 March the [Cabinet Office] wrote to Peter Mandelson - via his solicitors - to request any information held on his personal phone.

    "Peter Mandelson declined to comply with this request. The government has no further recourse to search the personal devices of Peter Mandelson."

    Allies of the Labour peer have previously said it would not be appropriate for him to hand over documents to government while the Metropolitan Police investigation is still ongoing.

    It's understood many of Mandelson's text messages as ambassador were on his official work phone and this was taken off him soon after he was sacked.

    The BBC has approached Lord Mandelson for comment.

    A screenshot of a document showing a quote from the Mandelson files saying that Mandelson denied to comply with a request to hand over information held on his personal phone.Image source, Cabinet Office
  5. Mandelson told Lammy the government would 'never regret' making him US ambassador, files showpublished at 14:37 BST
    Breaking

    Lord Mandelson told Justice Secretary David Lammy that he would make sure the government "never regret" appointing him as US ambassador, files released by the government show.

    In a handwritten note, dated 18 November, 2024, Mandelson writes if the government "were to appoint me I would make sure you never regret it".

    At the time, Lammy was foreign secretary.

    Mandelson was announced as the UK's ambassador to the US the following month, on 20 December 2024.

    letterImage source, Cabinet Office
  6. Mandelson and officials discussed idea of government 'red box' for Trumppublished at 14:30 BST

    Joe Pike
    Political correspondent

    Mandelson and senior officials discussed commissioning an official government “red box” to give as a gift to Donald Trump, the documents reveal.

    Amid complications in organising this, the former US ambassador told then-No 10 chief of staff Morgan McSweeney he’d “gone tonto” and that the “saga” was “like something out of [TV comedy show the] The Thick of It”.

    Olly Robbins, then the top official at the Foreign Office, said “one of the gifts that would mean the most to the President would be a red dispatch box with the gold crest and lettering mimicking a UK Government Ministerial box but with “President of the United States” inscribed upon it".

  7. Hundreds of pages released in three volumes of filespublished at 14:23 BST

    The government has released three volumes each made up of hundreds of pages relating to Lord Mandelson.

    The first volume is made up of 598 pages, while the second has 554 pages and the third has 352 pages.

    The documents include a mixture of WhatsApp messages, emails and hard-copy files, and they include exchanges between politicians.

  8. Latest batch of Mandelson files released by governmentpublished at 14:11 BST
    Breaking

    The latest batch of files relating to Lord Mandelson's appointment as the UK's ambassador to the US has just been released.

    We're combing through the documents now, and will bring you the key lines shortly. Stay with us.

  9. What are the files, and why are they being released?published at 14:06 BST

    In February, MPs approved the release of documents about Lord Mandelson’s appointment.

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer initially insisted he would not publish anything that could damage national security or diplomatic relations.

    But this position unravelled when senior Labour figures - including former deputy PM Angela Rayner - urged ministers to change course.

    The government ultimately agreed to involve a cross-party parliamentary committee in the process - the Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC). Sensitive documents have been referred to the ISC to decide what can and cannot be published.

    The first tranche of documents was published in March.

  10. What we learned from the first batch of filespublished at 13:45 BST

    Peter Mandelson, an older man with glasses, a quarter-zip pullover and jeans, walking his dog across a road.Image source, PA Media

    The first set of documents relating to the appointment of Lord Mandelson as theUK's ambassador to the US focused on the process of hiring and later firing the peer.

    Ahead of today's expected release of a new tranche of files, we've taken a look back at the key takeaways from those documents:

    "Reputational risk": Keir Starmer was advised that Mandelson's relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein posed a "general reputational risk" before his appointment as ambassador.

    "Weirdly rushed": The prime minister's national security adviser, Jonathan Powell, had said in a "fact-finding call" he found the appointment of Lord Mandelson "weirdly rushed".

    Severance package: The files suggested Mandelson requested a severance payment of £547,201 after he was sacked. The BBC understands he takes issue with this claim and insists he made it very clear he had no intention of taking his case to an employment tribunal. The Treasury ultimately agreed a payment of £75,000.

  11. Analysis

    Ministers braced for private texts and WhatsApps in Mandelson file releasepublished at 13:33 BST

    Chris Mason and Henry Zeffman
    Political editor and chief political correspondent

    File photo dated 21/04/26 of Lord Peter Mandelson.Image source, PA Media

    The appointment of Peter Mandelson as the UK's ambassador to Washington is like a bad news boomerang for the government.

    Over and over again the prime minister's most consequential judgement in office circles back into ministers' airspace – and today it will do so with gusto.

    It will be "another one of those weeks" one senior figure said, wearily.

    The scale of what is to come will be quite something: the largest government publication ever put before the Commons, and therefore us, other than the Chilcot Inquiry into the Iraq War – and that was a 12 volume, 2.6 million word affair.

    It won't be on that scale, but it will run to over 1,000 pages. The first tranche, back in March, amounted to 147 pages.

    Printed and bound, the publication will be made up of three volumes. More than 160 of the pages are made up of Lord Mandelson's text messages and WhatsApps.

    In big picture terms, the documents will offer a fascinating internal insight, at scale, into how government works: the private interactions, information flows and disagreements.

  12. The Mandelson revelations - a timelinepublished at 13:21 BST

    Lord Peter Mandelson outside his home in London.Image source, PA Media

    On 20 December 2024, Keir Starmer announced he would be appointing Peter Mandelson as the UK's ambassador to the US, saying he would bring "unrivalled experience to the role".

    A specialist agency within the Cabinet Office then began the vetting process. It recommended Developed Vetting clearance be denied, but Mandelson was granted clearance by Foreign Office officials to become ambassador.

    Here's a quick glance at what has unfolded since:

    • 11 September 2025: Mandelson is sacked from his role following fresh revelations about the extent of his relationship with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein
    • 1 February 2026: Mandelson resigns from the Labour Party and steps down from the House of Lords
    • 4 February 2026: MPs vote in favour of releasing documents relating to Mandelson's appointment
    • 8 February 2026: Morgan McSweeney quits as Starmer's chief of staff after it's revealed he advised the PM to appoint Mandelson
    • 23 February 2026: Mandelson is arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office, then released. He remains under criminal investigation and has repeatedly let it be known that he believes he has not acted criminally, did not act for personal gain and is co-operating with police
    • 11 March 2026: The first batch of files is released, showing Starmer was warned of the reputational risks before appointing Mandelson
    • 16 April 2026: No 10 confirms Mandelson failed the vetting process and says Starmer was not made aware. The former head of the Foreign Office, Olly Robbins, is sacked
    • 20 April 2026: Starmer tells MPs that if he had known Mandelson had failed vetting he would not have gone ahead with the appointment
    • 28 April 2026: McSweeney says he made"a serious mistake" in recommending the appointment of Mandelson as the UK's ambassador to the US
    • 31 April 2026: Three sources involved in the process of publishing the so-called Mandelson files tell the BBC the second tranche of documents will be published on 1 June
    • Today: The prime minister's spokesman confirms the second batch of files will be released
  13. Embarrassing texts, the vetting file: What will - and what won't - be in the releasepublished at 13:08 BST

    Joe Pike
    Political correspondent

    Today's release of more than 1,000 pages of government documents is among the largest ever laid in Parliament.

    Senior government sources have conceded the files will include details of text exchanges between ministers, advisers and Lord Mandelson which are embarrassing and cringeworthy.

    We can expect to read details of the discussions around Mandelson's appointment as US ambassador, as well as an insight into his time as the UK’s man in Washington.

    The document dump will contain emails, briefings and memos, as well as pages of messages on what seems to be the government’s preferred communications platform: WhatsApp.

    Mandelson’s vetting file will not be included - it’s understood the Metropolitan Police have asked for it to be held back while they investigate him on suspicion of misconduct in public office. Mandelson has denied wrongdoing.

    Other disclosures will be redacted on grounds of national security or international relations, such as private messages which could be critical of US President Donald Trump.

  14. Files will provide unprecedented government transparency - PM's spokesmanpublished at 13:04 BST

    Iain Watson
    Political correspondent

    A little earlier, Downing Street said the second tranche of the so-called Mandelson files will be released around 14:30 BST.

    Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister Darren Jones will be speaking in the Commons an hour later.

    The PM's official spokesman says "every government department" was involved in meeting the terms of the humble address - the demand from Parliament to see documents related to Lord Mandelson’s appointment and time as the UK's ambassador to the US.

    This is "the largest ever response to a humble address", the spokesman adds, which he says will provide "unprecedented" government transparency.

    It has involved the discovery, assessment and analysis of "thousands of documents" and material of a party political nature will be included "in the interests of maximum transparency".

    He also says there will be a clear explanation of how documents were gathered and any redactions made.

    Some documents held back at the request of the police will be made available at a later date but the timing is not in the government’s hands.

    Asked about disappearing messages in WhatsApp chats, he said there is a review of corporate communications channels.

    The spokesman also says, when asked if a response is expected from Keir Starmer, that the PM has no "public facing commitments" today.

  15. Second batch of Mandelson files to be releasedpublished at 13:01 BST

    An older man in glasses and a quarter-zip pullover against an out-of-focus green background.Image source, PA Media

    A second set of documents relating to Peter Mandelson's appointment as the UK's ambassador to the US will be released today.

    A government spokesperson says the release will provide "unprecedented government transparency". It will be made up of three volumes, running over 1,000 pages. More than 160 of those will include Lord Mandelson's text messages and WhatsApps.

    Mandelson was sacked as ambassador in September 2025 after fresh revelations emerged about the extent of his relationship with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

    Back in February, MPs voted to force the government to publish all papers relating to his appointment through a humble address - a parliamentary mechanism used to force the government to disclose certain information.

    The first tranche of documents, published in March, showed PM Keir Starmer was advised that Mandelson's relationship with Epstein posed a "general reputational risk".

    Our team of writers and correspondents will bring you the latest developments and analysis over the next few hours - stick with us.