Cabinet Office suggested Mandelson did not even need security vetting, Robbins tells MPs – UK politics live | Politics


Cabinet Office suggested Mandelson did not even need security vetting, Robbins tells MPs

In his letter to the committee, Robbins says the Cabinet Office suggested that Mandelson would not have to go through security vetting. He says:

double quotation markAfter the announcement, I believe the Cabinet Office (CO) raised whether Developed Veƫng (DV) was actually necessary. I understand the FCDO insisted that DV was a requirement before Mandelson took up his post in Washington.

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Henry Dyer on Robbins’ revelation about the Cabinet Office saying security vetting not needed

Henry Dyer is a Guardian investigative correspondent.

Olly Robbins has given remarkable evidence so far. He has spoken about the pressure the Foreign Office faced from Downing Street – weeks before he took the top job – about ensuring Peter Mandelson made it to Washington as ambassador. That included, Robbins claims, a discussion between the Cabinet Office and the Foreign Office as to whether or not Mandelson even needed to go through the vetting process.

Robbins said his predecessor had to be “very firm in person” about the necessity of Mandelson to face vetting in the days leading up to Christmas, in the face of arguments from the Cabinet Office that there was no need for Mandelson to face vetting, given he was a member of the House of Lords and a member of the privy council.

Given nearly all staff – including junior civil servants – in the Foreign Office require DV clearance, it would have been astonishing for the man in the top British diplomatic posting to not have received the same security clearance.

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