Minister defends Starmer amid Mandelson revelations, saying vetting decision ‘utterly unacceptable’ – UK politics live


Mandelson vetting decision “utterly unacceptable” – chief secretary to PM

With the prime minister in Paris for talks on the opening of the Strait of Hormuz, his chief secretary, Darren Jones, has been taking flak for the Mandelson vetting revelations on the morning media rounds.

Jones has told broadcasters the Foreign Office’s decision to overrule the security vetting findings was “utterly unacceptable”

He said he had ordered an urgent review after discovering that the Foreign Office and other Government departments the right to ignore security advice when appointing people to sensitive roles.

He told Sky News:

double quotation markIt is utterly unacceptable, not just in the individual case of Peter Mandelson and respect of the Prime Minister’s fury at the Foreign Office for not having taught him this information, but the very fact that their processes were in place that allow for that to happen in the first place.

That’s why in my role in the Cabinet Office, immediately last night, I suspended the rights for these organisations to make these judgments.

I’ve asked for an urgent review about what decisions these organisations have taken in the past to overrule the recommendations from UK security vetting, and I was due to announce a broader, independent review of the vetting process anyway. And this will now be part of that.

Earlier on ITV’s Good Morning Britain programme, Jones said he had suspended the rights of the Foreign Office to overrule security vetting recommendations. He said:

double quotation markAs soon as I found out last night that the Foreign Office and a small number of other organisations have the right to ignore the recommendation… I immediately suspended those rights and ordered an urgent audit.

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Key events

Continuing her criticism of the prime minister, Badenoch told BBC Radio 4 Today’s programme: “The fact is all roads lead to a resignation.”

She said:

double quotation markThe fact is the prime minister is telling everyone that he was told [about the Foreign Office vetting decision] on Tuesday.

The Ministerial Code states that when a minister discovers…that parliament has been inadvertently misled they need to correct the record at the first opportunity. The first opportunity was on Wednesday morning at prime minister’s questions. He gave a long sermon about all sorts of things, refused to answer questions I asked him, and didn’t tell the house, that in itself is a breach of the ministerial code.

Claiming full due process was followed when it wasn’t – another breach, misleading parliament. Breaching the ministerial code by telling people the security services had cleared him.

The fact is all roads lead to a resignation.

It doesn’t matter what story the prime minister is telling, at some point there is deliberate dishonesty – whether it’s the cover up story or the original story – one of these is deliberate dishonesty, they cant all be true, and that’s why I know he is lying.

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