Can Peter
Mandelson be stripped of his peerage over Epstein links?
Keir
Starmer wants the Labour peer removed from the House of Lords but such a move
is exceptionally complex
Jessica
Elgot Deputy political editor
Mon 2 Feb
2026 16.59 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/feb/02/can-peter-mandelson-stripped-peerage-epstein-links
Keir
Starmer has said he wants Peter Mandelson out of the House of Lords, after the
peer was found to have deeper links with the disgraced financier Jeffrey
Epstein, including emails which suggested Epstein had sent thousands of pounds
to Lord Mandelson’s husband.
Others
appeared to show confidential market-sensitive information from inside No 10
was shared with Epstein while Mandelson was business secretary.
But
removing Mandelson’s peerage is exceptionally complex – and there are many
different routes it could take.
Does
Starmer have the power to remove Mandelson from the Lords?
No. He
has said he “believes that Peter Mandelson should not be a member of the House
of Lords or use the title”. But he has said the Lords should implement changes
to make it easier to expel peers.
In the
meantime, it is the hope of No 10 that Mandelson resigns of his own accord.
Mandelson is on a leave of absence from the Lords and has resigned from the
Labour party.
What
happens if Mandelson resigns from the Lords?
Under the
2014 House of Lords Reform Act, Mandelson could resign from the Lords and
relinquish his peerage. But this would not strip him of the title – he would
still be free to call himself Lord Peter Mandelson of Foy and Hartlepool.
There is
another way he could go quietly without resigning. His current leave of absence
from the Lords lasts until the end of the parliamentary session in May. He is
no longer US ambassador, the reason for his absence, so he needs to come back
and retake the oath in the Lords in the next session.
If he
does not do so by the end of that next session, his membership automatically
lapses. But again, he would keep the title.
What if
Mandelson does not resign?
It may be
possible for Mandelson to be expelled if he is found to have broken the Lords
code of conduct – under the 2014 Act – but it is not simple.
A
complaint must be made and reviewed and there is a question mark over whether
the current code of conduct can be retrospectively applied, as the code has
been significantly strengthened in recent years.
Can the
Lords change the rules to make it easier?
This is
clearly what the government is hoping will happen if Mandelson does not resign.
Asked if Starmer wanted Mandelson out of the Lords “by hook or by crook”, the
prime minister’s spokesperson emphatically said yes.
The
Labour manifesto says the government intends to strengthen the powers to remove
disgraced members. This is not part of the current programme of work in the
Lords – and no preparatory work seems to have been done on how to achieve this.
Even if
Mandelson leaves the Lords, can he still use the title?
It is the
crown that grants a peerage and, according to the bible of Lords procedure,
Gadd’s Peerage Law, it is then “very difficult to deprive the holder of it”.
A peerage
can only be removed by an act of parliament. This has taken place before – the
Titles Deprivation Act 1917 – which removed the peerages of a group of lords
who had aided Britain’s enemies during the war. We are far from those
circumstances. No 10 believes it would be exceptionally constitutionally
difficult to go down that route, even with a large Commons majority.
Many
former peers who have left still use the title lord, even hereditary peers who
were removed in the late 1990s. Under the current system it seems near
impossible that even the most egregious acts can lead to a peer losing their
titles.

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