Peter Mandelson will be asked to supply messages from his personal phone as part of the investigation into his appointment as Keir Starmer’s ambassador to the US.
In February, MPs forced the government to commit to publishing tens of thousands of documents after a controversy erupted over the prime minister’s awareness of the former peer’s links to the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein before he was given the prestigious posting.
The Cabinet Office is working to obtain as much information as possible about the process, according to No 10 sources. Mandelson has not yet been asked to hand over messages but will be told to provide everything he holds in scope of the humble address, the parliamentary tool used to force the release of correspondence.
On Friday, the Times reported that Mandelson had handed over his work phone after being sacked as US ambassador because of his close friendship with the disgraced financier, but said the Cabinet Office had not asked for messages on his personal device. Officials were said to be attempting to “reconstruct” the contents of his personal phone by asking ministers and officials for any correspondence.
Downing street sources said a team of officials were gathering communications, including WhatsApp messages and emails, from anyone who would have been in contact with Mandelson. While the former peer had not yet been asked for messages from his personal phone, he would be and that had always been “part of the plan”, they said.
“This is a significant administrative process,” said a No 10 source. “There is a determination in government to comply in full with the humble address, but there is a process to follow. We want to get this out there as soon as we can.”
Parliament is now in recess, and it is understood that the information gathered will be put before parliament’s intelligence and security committee, which will assess whether releasing the documents would compromise national security. The Metropolitan police will also be given oversight of the information gathered to ensure it does not interfere with a separate investigation into Mandelson’s alleged misconduct into public office.
Concerns have been raised that exchanges relating to the appointment could be lost after the theft of Morgan McSweeney’s mobile phone last year. But the Guardian understands that Cabinet Office holds a number of text and email exchanges between the two men. A tranche of McSweeney’s correspondence is expected to be publicly released as part of the Mandelson files.
On Tuesday it emerged that McSweeney did not disclose that he was Starmer’s chief of staff at the time when he reported the theft of his phone, according to a transcript released by the Met in a highly unorthodox move for the force, which said it wanted to correct misreporting of the incident.
Mandelson, a political appointment rather than a career diplomat, was sacked from his Washington role in September last year over his links with Epstein, who died in 2019. McSweeney became the focus of MPs’ ire, with many blaming him for pushing for the appointment. He quit Downing Street last month.
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