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Starmer avoids parliamentary investigation after MPs reject motion over Mandelson US ambassador appointment
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BBC UK News·28.04.2026·🇬🇧United Kingdom·Politique

Starmer avoids parliamentary investigation after MPs reject motion over Mandelson US ambassador appointment

Conservative motion to refer PM to Privileges Committee defeated as Labour MPs summoned back from campaigning

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Sir Keir Starmer will not face a parliamentary investigation over claims he misled MPs about the process to appoint Lord Mandelson as US ambassador. Some Labour MPs on the left of the party said the PM should have referred himself to the Privileges Committee, but the majority voted to reject the motion after a concerted operation by No 10 to ensure they were on side.

Sir Keir has denied accusations he misled MPs over whether vetting for the role of US ambassador followed "full due process" and his assertion that "no pressure whatsoever" was applied to officials at the Foreign Office. Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch tabled a motion which sought to have the PM's remarks assessed by the cross-party committee responsible for looking into cases of MPs breaking parliamentary rules.

The Ministerial Code states that ministers who knowingly mislead Parliament are expected to resign, while any inadvertent error should be corrected "at the earliest opportunity". But some Labour MPs questioned why they had been instructed to oppose it and suggested it risked looking similar to a "cover-up". South Shields MP Emma Lewell said the government's handling of the vote "smacks, once again, of being out of touch and disconnected from the public mood". She said: "It has played into the terrible narrative that there is something to hide and good, decent colleagues will be accused of being complicit in a cover-up."

Lewell said Sir Keir should have referred himself to the committee "with a clear statement that he is doing so to clear his name". Speaking to the BBC's Politics Live, Labour MP Rebecca Long-Bailey suggested there would be a "moment of reckoning after the local elections" on 7 May for Sir Keir's future. But several Labour MPs defended the government's approach during the debate, with Gurinder Singh Josan describing the call for a Privileges Committee referral "premature" given the vetting process was being scrutinised elsewhere in Parliament. Cardiff West MP Alex Barros-Curtis said he did "not believe the case was made out" for the motion by the Conservatives.

In a sign of the government effort to ensure the motion was rejected, Labour MPs campaigning in Scotland ahead of next week's elections were summoned back to Westminster. Opening the debate, Badenoch examined Sir Keir's defence of his remarks before noting the Ministerial Code is "very clear" in the need for the record to be corrected at the earliest opportunity. She said: "It is very obvious that what the prime minister said at the despatch box was not correct. It's clear that full due process was not followed."

Pressed by Badenoch to repeat the PM's assertion that "no pressure existed whatsoever" in the case, Jones said Sir Keir's words should be placed "in the right context". Jones was heckled by opposition MPs as he said Sir Keir was "specifically responding to the allegation that there was pressure that Peter Mandelson should not be vetted at all and that he should be sent to Washington regardless of the vetting outcome". Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey earlier said the country needed a government focused on dealing with cost-of-living concerns, adding: "Crucially it needs a government that it can trust." Reform UK deputy leader Richard Tice said Sir Keir "prides himself on process" but anecdotally it "seems that there is a culture that does not exist around him and within him"; while Green MP Ellie Chowns said "it is clear that there is a case to answer here" for the PM.

Lord Mandelson began the Washington ambassadorial role in February 2025 but was sacked in September after Downing Street said new information about the depth of his relationship with late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein had emerged. Sir Keir has faced repeated questions over the appointment, including on why the peer was given security clearance for the role by the Foreign Office despite concerns being raised by vetting officials. The Commons debate on Tuesday came after the Foreign Affairs Committee heard further evidence about the vetting process, including from the senior civil servant at the Foreign Office when the PM decided to send Lord Mandelson to the US.

This article was originally published by BBC UK News.

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