Morgan
McSweeney, Keir Starmer’s former chief of staff, to be questioned by MPs
Exclusive:
McSweeney summoned by foreign affairs select committee in rare step, as
Mandelson vetting row continues
Pippa
Crerar and Jessica Elgot
Wed 22
Apr 2026 18.46 BST
Morgan
McSweeney is facing a showdown with MPs who will grill him on whether he placed
extreme pressure on the Foreign Office to approve Peter Mandelson as
ambassador.
The prime
minister’s former chief of staff will be questioned next Tuesday by the foreign
affairs select committee over allegations made by the former Foreign Office
permanent secretary Olly Robbins, who said No 10 had questioned why Mandelson
should be subject to any vetting.
Robbins,
who was sacked by Keir Starmer after the Guardian revealed formal vetting
concerns were overruled, said there had been a “dismissive” attitude from
Downing Street towards security vetting.
McSweeney
will be asked by MPs to also respond to allegations by Robbins that another
ambassadorial post was sought for Starmer’s outgoing communications chief
Matthew Doyle, who was later made a peer.
McSweeney,
who left No 10 in February, has been adamant he did not know that Mandelson had
failed his security vetting, which was then overridden by the Foreign Office.
It is
highly unusual for Downing Street chiefs of staff to appear before Commons
committees even after they have left post, giving MPs the rare opportunity to
question one of the most powerful figures in recent Labour history.
The
committee has also asked a number of other key officials to appear, including
Philip Barton, Robbins’ predecessor as Foreign Office permanent secretary, who
was in post when Mandelson’s appointment was announced and handed over to Olly
Robbins in January.
Ian
Collard, the Foreign Office’s then director of security, who briefed Robbins on
UKSV’s findings, has also been summoned. Cat Little, the permanent secretary to
the Cabinet Office, will appear on Thursday.
Little,
who has been at the heart of the row between the Foreign Office and her
department, is expected to set out a counterpoint to the evidence given by
Robbins earlier this week.
MPs are
expected to question Little on why she did not inform Starmer immediately when
she discovered the vetting failure. The Guardian revealed last week that she,
along with the head of the civil service, Antonia Romeo, had been aware since
March.
Robbins
told MPs on Tuesday that No 10 had created an “atmosphere of pressure” that
made it impossible to deny clearance for Mandelson and had taken a “dismissive”
attitude to vetting.
Emily
Thornberry, the foreign affairs committee chair, asked whether it had been
McSweeney, to which Robbins said it was mainly the prime minister’s private
office, which is staffed by civil servants. But he added: “I think that the
private office would only have been [putting on] this pressure themselves if
they were under pressure.”
McSweeney
quit his role in February over Mandelson’s appointment, saying he took “full
responsibility” for advising the prime minister to appoint Mandelson, who had
been a close ally and political mentor.
The
senior No 10 adviser’s position had grown increasingly untenable as pressure on
Starmer mounted over the scandal, which followed the release of emails
underlining the extent of Mandelson’s relationship with the convicted child sex
offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The
Mandelson scandal dominated PMQs on Wednesday, with Starmer coming under fire
from the Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, and Liberal Democrat leader, Ed
Davey, over the issue. The prime minister said Robbins’s evidence “puts to bed
all the allegations levelled at me” after claims he had misled parliament.
However,
Starmer appeared to confirm that No 10 had tried to find an ambassadorial
posting for his former director of communications. “Matthew Doyle worked for
many years in public service for me as PM and other ministers,” he said. “When
people leave roles there are often conversations about other roles, but nothing
came of this.”
Little
obtained the summary document on Mandelson’s vetting at the end of March and
several weeks later, after taking legal advice and making other checks, she
informed the prime minister. Sources said she had found it difficult to get
information from the Foreign Office.
The
Guardian understands that Little appeared in private before parliament’s
intelligence and security committee on Tuesday. The committee is understood to
be furious at the lack of crucial documents relating to Robbins’s decision to
overturn the recommendation to deny Mandelson security clearance, and his
failure to record notes of important meetings.
Collard
is expected to be questioned on whether he briefed Robbins that Mandelson was a
“borderline” case rather than having failed vetting, a central point of
contention between Robbins and No 10. Barton has been asked to appear to give
evidence on whether he also perceived there to be significant pressure from No
10 to approve the appointment of Mandelson.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário