No 10
‘did not know’ of aide’s links to paedophile when he was given peerage
Downing
Street not aware of Matthew Doyle’s support for Sean Morton when peerage was
granted, minister says
Ben Quinn
Political correspondent
Wed 11
Feb 2026 09.31 GMT
Downing
Street was not aware that Keir Starmer’s longstanding communications chief had
campaigned for a paedophile when his peerage was announced, a minister has
said.
Matthew
Doyle, who stepped down as the No 10 head of communications last March, was
suspended on Monday from the Labour whip in his new role in the Lords after it
emerged that he had campaigned on behalf of a friend who had been charged with
possessing indecent images of children.
Questions
about the peerage overshadowed attempts to promote a multibillion pound
announcement on special educational needs support on Wednesday and added to
continuing pressure facing Starmer about his own decision to make Peter
Mandelson ambassador to Washington despite his close links to Jeffrey Epstein,
the convicted sex offender.
“No 10
did not know before they made the decision to give him the peerage,” the
schools minister, Georgia Gould, told Sky News when questioned about the Doyle
peerage.
Challenged
about the fact that a Sunday Times story reported on 27 December that Downing
Street had investigated Doyle’s continued support for Sean Morton after he was
charged with indecent child image offences, Gould said the announcement was
made on 10 December.
“But I
think the prime minister has looked at this afresh, given the commitment that
he has made to ensure the highest standards in public life.”
The
Labour party chair, Anna Turley, said on Tuesday that it was her “personal
view” that Doyle’s peerage should be taken away.
However,
Gould declined to echo those calls, referring to an ongoing investigation by
the party, and adding: “We’ll wait for that to conclude. But the prime minister
said on Monday night that we want to ensure the highest standards in public
life.”
However,
she told Times Radio that the vetting process for appointments to the House of
Lords had to change in light of the decision to remove the whip from the peer.
Doyle
faced pressure after the Sunday Times reported on his support for Morton even
when the councillor had been charged in 2016.
According
to the paper, after Morton was charged and suspended by Labour, Doyle insisted
Morton was innocent and travelled to Scotland to support him as he stood as an
independent candidate wearing a top with the slogan: “Re-elect Sean Morton.”
It is
understood that Starmer wanted the issue looked at again, after the reports,
and that he and Downing Street say they did not know that Doyle had campaigned
for Morton before he was made a peer.
Meanwhile,
Scottish Labour suspended the party whip of MSP Pam Duncan-Glancy, who stepped
down as education spokesperson in December after disclosures about her
friendship with Morton.
In a
statement, Doyle said: “I want to apologise for my past association with Sean
Morton. His offences were vile and I completely condemn the actions for which
he was rightly convicted. My thoughts are with the victims and all those
impacted by these crimes.”

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