Keir Starmer will finally break his silence on the Mandelson scandal today as Labour MPs openly warn he could be âgoneâ in months.
The PM will field questions for the first time since the sacking of the US ambassador over extraordinary emails sent to Jeffrey Epstein.
On the eve of Donald Trumpâs state visit, the government benches are seething with fury over the latest example of the premierâs dire judgment.Â
MPs are openly warning that Sir Keir â who entered No10 with a massive majority just last year â only has months to turn things around.Â
The May elections have been identified as a make-or-break moment, with fears Nigel Farage could see another huge surge.
Nonetheless, Sir Keir is encountering more pressing issues regarding the timeline of what was known about Lord Mandelsonâs association with Epstein. Meanwhile, the Prime Minister is set to announce a new nuclear power agreement with the United States.
Keir Starmer will field questions today for the first time since the sacking of the US ambassador over extraordinary emails sent to Jeffrey EpsteinÂ
Pictured: Lord Mandelson (left) in a fluffy white dressing gown enjoying a chat with Epstein (right)
It has emerged that Downing Street became aware of the damning correspondence on Tuesday â two days before he was sacked.Â
The Daily Mail has uncovered that Downing Street was informed that the emails included Lord Mandelsonâs suggestions that Epsteinâs original conviction was unjust and should be contested.
However, authorities emphasized that this information, which appeared in a 2,000-word memo from Bloomberg News seeking Lord Mandelsonâs comments, was not communicated to Sir Keir. Sir Keir reassured MPs during Prime Ministerâs Questions on Wednesday that he maintained âconfidenceâ in his envoy to Washington.
In the meantime, Foreign Office permanent secretary Sir Oliver Robbins, known for his controversial role in Theresa Mayâs Brexit negotiations, was seeking Lord Mandelsonâs response to the emails, which only arrived later on Wednesday afternoon.
By Thursday morning, the Foreign Office declared that the âassertion that Jeffrey Epsteinâs first conviction was unjust and should be contested is new information,â leading to his immediate withdrawal as ambassador.
The revelation adds to pressure on the PMâs all-powerful chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, with several MPs calling for him to be sacked.
Left-winger Richard Burgon told BBC Radio 4âs Today Programme that he expects Sir Keir to be âgoneâ by next summer.
âLots of MPs are looking to the elections next May, the opinion polls suggest itâs going to be a complete disaster unfortunately,â he said.
âI think itâs inevitable that if Mayâs elections go as people predict, and the opinion polls predict, then I think Starmer will be gone at that time.
âIt feels as though we have been enduring an unpopular government for many years, rather than just a year into an administration that replaced the Conservatives. We are losing voters to the left and risking seat losses to the right.â
âWe face a real threat for the first time in our countryâs history of what I would consider to be a far-right extremist government â itâs the Prime Ministerâs duty to stop that happening. You can only do that by delivering for people who want real change, and if you canât do that, then of course, thereâs going to have to be change at the very top.â
The MP for Leeds East added: âThe Prime Minister needs to change course immediately, otherwise, Iâm pretty certain heâll be gone next May as it stands.â
Education Select Committee chair Helen Hayes said that if the May elections were as bad as feared there would have to be âquestions about the nature of the leadershipâ.
âIf those elections donât go well then that will be the time to ask questions⌠Questions about the nature of the leadership and whether things can continue as they are,â she said.
Touring broadcast studios this morning, skills minister Baroness Jacqui Smith denied Sir Keir is in the âlast-chance saloonâ.
Pressure is mounting on the PMâs all-powerful chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, with several MPs calling for him to be sacked
She told Times Radio: âNo, what Keir Starmer is doing today is heâs in Downing Street meeting with representatives from the nuclear industry to talk about the deal we are striking with the US this week to help us to get back control of our energy supply and build more nuclear power.â
Asked whether she was surprised at how quickly backbenchers had begun discussing whether Sir Keir should go, the peer said: âNo what I was emphasising is that I think all of us elected relatively recently, or in my case not elected but representing the Government, on a programme to build back peopleâs confidence in this country, to build back peopleâs confidence that government can make a difference for them, need to focus on that.âÂ