Gordon Brown asks top civil servant to investigate Mandelson ‘leak to Epstein’

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The former prime minister Gordon Brown has asked the cabinet secretary to investigate Peter Mandelson’s apparent disclosure of highly sensitive government information to Jeffrey Epstein.Mandelson was business secretary during Brown’s premiership, when he appears to have leaked an economic briefing to Epstein, who was serving a jail sentence at the time for soliciting prostitution from a minor.The email, which had the subject line “Business issues”, was sent by Brown’s special adviser Nick Butler on 13 June 2009 after the global financial crisis.It detailed potential policy measures and suggested the government had saleable assets.Mandelson forwarded the email to Epstein and said: “Interesting note that’s gone to the PM.

”Epstein responded to Mandelson, asking “what salable (sic) assets?” A reply from a redacted email address said: “Land, property I guess.”Responding to the news that Mandelson appeared to have leaked confidential information while a cabinet minister, Brown said: “I have today asked the cabinet secretary to investigate the disclosure of confidential and market sensitive information from the then business department during the global financial crisis.”Butler, who penned the memo, said he was considering reporting the matter to the police.“We – that is all the people included on this email and many others – worked on the basis of trust, which allowed us to float ideas.I am disgusted by the breach of trust, presumably intended to give Epstein the chance to make money,” he told the Times.

Keir Starmer suggested earlier on Monday that Mandelson should resign from the House of Lords and that the upper chamber should urgently modernise its disciplinary procedures to strip him of his peerage,Mandelson resigned his membership of the Labour party on Sunday,It comes after the US justice department released millions of files relating to Epstein on Friday, which shed new light on the ties between the late sex offender and Mandelson, who was sacked as Britain’s ambassador to Washington last year,Brown said he had requested that Chris Wormald, the cabinet secretary, examine communication about the sale of assets between Mandelson and Epstein in September last year after an earlier release of documents relating to the disgraced financier,But Brown said he was told “no departmental record could be found”.

Brown said on Monday: “Given the shocking new information that has come to light in the latest tranche of Epstein papers, including information about the transfer to Mr Epstein of at least one highly sensitive government document as well as other highly confidential information, I have now written to ask for a wider and more intensive inquiry to take place into the wholly unacceptable disclosure of government papers and information during the period when the country was battling the global financial crisis.“Given the public interest in this, I have asked that the results of the inquiry be published and done so as soon as possible.”The latest tranche of documents released by authorities in the US show Epstein was sent internal discussions from the top of the UK government in the aftermath of the financial crash.In the June 2009 email, which had been sent to Jeremy Heywood, the then No 10 chief of staff, and the business minister Shriti Vadera, Butler said: “A number of business leaders who understand financial engineering have asked in different ways why we are borrowing so much and tolerating such high debt charges when we have saleable assets in hand which are not strategic – i.e.

there is no good political or economic reason why they are in the public sector.“I know Jeremy [Heywood] has done some work on this.“The point which the Tories appear to have missed in focusing the argument on cuts v spending is that asset sales of even £ 20bn would relieve the debt burden, reduce borrowing costs, and provide some funds for new investment.”Another document released on Friday shows that an analysis of business lending drawn up by Vadera in August 2009 was also sent to Epstein.The sender of the email has been redacted, but Mandelson also appears to have been involved in the discussions.

Mandelson also appeared to tell Epstein he would lobby ministers over a tax on bankers’ bonuses in 2009, and to confirm an imminent bailout package for the euro the day before it was announced in 2010.Downing Street said Starmer had asked Wormald to conduct “an urgent review” looking at “all available information regarding Mandelson’s contacts with Epstein during his period as a government minister”.
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