Farage: Mandelson's appointment shows PM made 'grave, grave error of judgement'
Sir Keir Starmer made a "grave, grave error of judgement" when he appointed Lord Mandelson as the UK's ambassador to the US, Nigel Farage has said.
An initial review by the Cabinet Office of documents released by the US Department of Justice has found that emails sent by Lord Mandelson to the paedophile financier Epstein likely contain market sensitive information relating to the 2008 financial crash and official activities thereafter to stabilise the economy.
At a news conference in Westminster this lunchtime, the Reform UK leader was asked about efforts to strip Peter Mandelson of his title as a lord - before the peer announced his resignation.
Farage replied that he is "fine" with doing this, but that it "absolutely is not the issue of the day", pointing instead to accusations Mandelson shared market sensitive information with Epstein.
Watch: Nigel Farage speaks on Mandelson
Farage suggested that if Mandelson did give Epstein advanced notice of the bailout, the paedophile could have made "hundreds of millions out of that trade".
The MP, who previously sat as a member of the European Parliament, explained: "When those bailouts happened, there was a massive immediate market shift. I watched it, it was huge.
"Anybody that had that information, that access to money and funds are the kind that Epstein did... Well, if he made tens of millions out of it, he was lax because there was a chance to make hundreds of millions out of that trade."
But he added: "There is no direct insider trading law for bonds in quite the same way that there is for stocks. And that's been the case since 1981, the Insider trading Act.
"But it is highly sensitive market information.
"So fine, talk about removing the title. But that really is, I think, a very small part of something that is much bigger, much more serious. And I'm not even sure that we know the full story yet."
How many more warnings did Starmer need?
Farage also hit out at Sir Keir Starmer and his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, over Mandelson's appointment as UK ambassador to the US, following Mandelson's two previous sackings from government.
He said: "How many more warnings did the prime minister or, indeed, Morgan McSweeney need? They have made a grave, grave error of judgement despite repeated warnings."
He also stated that his name is mentioned 37 times in the Epstein files - but insisted he never met the disgraced financier, and he didn't go to Epstein island.
Mandelson, who served most recently as UK ambassador to the US between February and September 2025, has strongly denied all wrongdoing.
In a previous statement, he said: "I was wrong to believe Epstein following his conviction and to continue my association with him afterwards.
"I apologise unequivocally for doing so to the women and girls who suffered."