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UK’s Starmer faces calls to resign as Mandelson row reignites

By Thomson Reuters Apr 17, 2026 | 1:49 AM

(Corrects spelling of Olly Robbins in paragraphs 3 and 4)

LONDON, April 17 (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Friday faced renewed calls from his political opponents to resign after ​it was revealed that his former ambassador to the ‌United States failed security vetting and was still allowed to take up the job.

The government on Thursday confirmed Mandelson – who was subsequently fired after Starmer said he had lied about the strength of his relationship with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein – ‌had ​failed his security vetting before taking up ⁠the role.

The government said Starmer ⁠was unaware officials in the foreign office had overruled the vetting recommendation and a source said the most senior official at the foreign ministry, Olly Robbins, would leave his role after losing ​Starmer’s confidence.

“I don’t think the prime minister can get out of his responsibility by sacking Olly Robbins. I think the buck ⁠has to stop with Mr. Starmer,” Liberal ⁠Democrat Leader Ed Davey told BBC Radio.

“I think the ​evidence suggests that he misled the Commons (parliament) and misled the public. That’s ​against all the rules, and that’s why we’ve called ‌for him to go.”

Starmer has previously apologised for the appointment but defended his own actions, accusing Mandelson of creating a “litany of deceit” about his Epstein ties and promising to release documents on how he was ⁠appointed.

Senior minister Darren Jones told LBC Starmer was “furious” at not being told Mandelson had failed the security vetting and would update parliament on Monday. ⁠He said Starmer had ‌not misled parliament and that the process around ⁠it was followed, but was flawed.

“I don’t think ​it ‌brings the Prime Minister’s future into question,” Jones said.

Mandelson ​is under ⁠police investigation for allegedly leaking government documents to the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. He has not commented publicly on allegations he leaked documents, and a lawyer for Mandelson did not provide a comment on Thursday about the vetting process.

(Reporting by Sarah Young; Writing by Catarina Demony; Editing ​by William James)