Mandelson papers being withheld, says intelligence watchdog
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Mandelson papers being withheld, says intelligence watchdog6 minutes agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GooglePA MediaSome documents relating to Lord Mandelson's appointment as the UK's ambassador to the US are being "withheld" from MPs, the Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) has said. Lord Beamish, chair of the committee tasked with reviewing the documents, said Lord Mandelson's vetting file was one example of a document that had been kept back.He said the government may have good reasons to withhold some material but did not have the authority to do so and ministers should seek MPs' approval to retain certain pieces of information. A Cabinet Office spokesperson said the government was "working to publish as much material as we can as soon as possible". Conservative shadow minister Alex Burghart said: "It is outrageous that Labour are trying to withhold documents about the Mandelson-Epstein affair from Parliament."He accused the government of trying "to pull the wool over the public and Parliament's eyes".Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said: "This thing reeks. Why is the government trying to cover up, again, the scale of the Mandelson mess? What could be worse than what we've already seen?"In February, MPs voted to force the government to publish all papers relating to the appointment through a parliamentary process called a humble address. The government initially opposed the motion arguing that it did not want to publish material that could damage national security or diplomatic relations.However, in a last-minute compromise it agreed to first send sensitive documents to the Intelligence and Security Committee, who would decide what could and could not be published. The first tranche of documents was published in March. A 'weirdly rushed' appointment - and other key takeaways from Mandelson filesKey points from Starmer's Mandelson statementKey points as MPs qu...





