MPs call for police investigation into Mandelson over financial allegations
Multiple MPs have called on the government to say that Peter Mandelson should be under criminal investigation.
It follows allegations that Lord Mandelson leaked sensitive UK government tax plans to Jeffrey Epstein when he was the business secretary and gave him advanced warning of a €500bn EU bank bailout in 2010.
This comes from documents released by the US Department of Justice.
Dame Emily Thornberry, who chairs the Foreign Affairs Committee, says: "Surely this is not a matter of whether Peter Mandelson be in the House of Lords. This is a matter of whether the police should be involved."
Similarly, SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn, says: "I cannot understand why the minister is acting like the Labour Party have been proactive in relation to this when they have known for months about Peter Mandelson revelations, and yet have allowed him to maintain a party membership throughout that time.
"And I cannot understand why half an hour ago, the prime minister of the United Kingdom did not just apologise for his decision-making, his lack of judgement and say that Peter Mandelson should be subject to a criminal investigation."
Watch: Sky's chief politics correspondent Jon Craig on the SNP's call for a police investigation
Responding to these calls, Darren Jones tells the Commons: "The undeclared exchange of funds, the passing on of government information, let alone the facts that those exchanges were to a convicted paedophile, are wholly unconscionable.
"The House will know that if any of those activities were to take place today, ministers would be swiftly relieved of their duties and could be, via the record petitions available to the House, removed from their constituency too.
"As to the matter of criminal investigations, of course, that is a matter for the prosecution services and the police."
Responding specifically to Flynn's allegations, the chief secretary to the PM insisted: "Neither the Labour Party nor the government or indeed this House or the honourable member knew about the information that was made available by the US Department of Justice only a matter of days ago.
"As soon as that information became available, the government has acted accordingly."
Mandelson has previously insisted: "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."
Paste BN has approached him over the latest allegations.