Mandelson Vetting Row: Sir Olly Robbins to Testify as PM Denies Knowledge
Constitutional debate erupts as Foreign Office civil servant prepares to appear before MPs over security vetting of new Washington ambassador
Hızlı Bakış
- Sir Olly Robbins, the former most senior civil servant at the Foreign Office, will testify before the Foreign Affairs Select Committee this week amid a row over his handling of Lord Mandelson's security vetting.
- The Guardian revealed that potentially explosive vetting information about the new Washington ambassador was not passed to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.
- The controversy centers on the Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010 and whether civil servants can flag security vetting recommendations to ministers.
Yapay zekâ özeti
Neden Önemli?
This controversy involves the appointment of Lord Mandelson as Britain's Ambassador to Washington. Security vetting concerns were apparently raised but not passed to the Prime Minister. Sir Olly Robbins, who had only recently arrived at the Foreign Office, was removed from his position. The timing is particularly sensitive for Labour with local elections due in a fortnight.
I occasionally like to kid myself that after 20-plus years of reporting from Westminster, I can't be entirely surprised any more. Then, along came the row of the last few days after The Guardian's revelations about Lord Mandelson, his vetting and the removal of the most senior civil servant at the Foreign Office, Sir Olly Robbins. How could so senior a civil servant be in possession of such apparently politically explosive information and not pass it on to the prime minister and others? And how could a prime minister, embarking on a high-profile and controversial appointment, be so insufficiently curious that he didn't prise this information out of the government machine? Context is key here: in January of last year, Sir Olly had just arrived at the Foreign Office as its permanent under-secretary. Weeks before, his predecessor, Sir Philip Barton, had worked through the formal niceties of confirming Lord Mandelson's appointment to Washington, such as writing to the King about it on the 18th of December. In other words, it was a done deal. We already know some vetting issues had already been raised with the prime minister, but Whitehall, the civil service, knew of Sir Keir Starmer's wishes. So perhaps there was a sense that the security vetting didn't reveal much more than was already known, convention said it shouldn't be passed on anyway, plus it was too late. This would appear to be the bones of the argument Sir Olly will use publicly when he appears before the Foreign Affairs Select Committee. And this is where we get to the pointy headed end of this row: a debate about the meaning of the Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010. It states that "the secretary of state has the power to manage the diplomatic service...but they do not cover national security vetting." This is a reference to the foreign secretary and outwardly gives cover to Sir Olly's anticipated defence, that the law states he should be discreet with information gathered during vetting. And yet on Sunday night, the government published a statement setting out its interpretation of the law, claiming nothing stops civil servants from "sensibly flagging UK Security Vetting recommendations." They even delve into the explanatory notes of the Act to try to make their case. This spells out that civil servants must not "deceive or knowingly mislead ministers, Parliament or others" and "civil servants advising ministers should be aware of the constitutional significance of Parliament, and of the conventions governing the relationship between Parliament and the government." In other words, don't let ministers go before MPs and say things you know to be a misleading picture. In short, Sir Keir will say I wasn't told and the fact that Sir Olly's friends are saying he was right not to tell him proves the prime minister didn't lie. The Conservative argument in the Commons will amount to suggesting that Sir Keir has beheaded more people close to him than Henry VIII - and they hope Monday afternoon will "hasten squeaky bum time of Labour MPs", as one Tory source put it to me. Kemi Badenoch will challenge Labour MPs to ask themselves if Sir Keir is the best they can do, as the government finds itself consumed again by questions about Lord Mandelson as opposed to the consequences of the Iran war, the cost of living and much else besides. The mood within the Labour Party had changed in recent weeks, it has felt less volcanically angry. The question now is whether this fiasco turns the temperature up again. "Let's be frank, it's bad this stuff," one said to me. "It reignites everything so many were furious with him about in the first place," says another. With a big set of elections just over a fortnight away, timing couldn't be worse for them. Perhaps little wonder given he was so spectacularly fired out of a cannon by the prime minister and foreign secretary, over the appointment of an ambassador that had been signed off before Sir Olly even arrived at the Foreign Office. Those who have worked alongside him describe him as a "by the book man" who has had a distinguished career in public service and is "diligent about processes and acting properly." The tone and tenor of his appearance before the Foreign Affairs Committee will be as fascinating as his testimony. It will also be worth cross-checking what we hear from the prime minister on Monday afternoon with what has already been published about the appointment of Lord Mandelson. Several people I spoke to over the weekend said the ambassador in Washington would typically have the highest level of security clearance – what is known as Strap 3. The Times is reporting that Lord Mandelson did indeed have this level of clearance and it is my understanding that while he was in Washington he was frequently taken to a secure room in the embassy to read this material, as is standard practice with the most sensitive intelligence. And yet, in the deluge of documents already published there is an email sent to Lord Mandelson at the beginning of February of last year, when he was beginning in the role, saying, on page 76, that the job "requires DV+STRAP" and so "a new STRAP application form will need to be submitted as STRAP clearance is role specific".
Bundan Sonra Ne Olabilir?
Yapay zekâ öngörüsü — kesinlik taşımaz
Sir Olly Robbins will defend his actions by arguing the law prevented him from sharing vetting information
Çok muhtemel · Günler içinde
Conservatives will continue to press the issue in Parliament through Monday's session
Çok muhtemel · Günler içinde
The controversy will damage Labour's electoral prospects in the upcoming local elections
Muhtemel · Haftalar içinde
Açık Sorular
- What specific information was in the security vetting that was not passed to the PM?
- Did Sir Philip Barton know about the vetting concerns before his departure?
- Was there a deliberate decision not to inform the Prime Minister?
- What exactly did the King know about the vetting issues?






