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‘Peter Mandelson scandal is extra surprising than Profumo affair nevertheless it’s removed from over’

It was The Seven Days That Battered Britain, a week that threatened to bring down British society as we know it. And the danger is not over yet. There is more to come, as the horrific Epstein files in the USA cascade fresh revelations about wrong-doing in high places. New emails exposing the involvement of former Prince Andrew have further embarrassed the Royal Family.

Anger among Labour MPs about their Prime Minister’s fatal admission of knowingly favouring “the best pal of a convicted nonce” is matched by a growing sense of public outrage. Never before has the biggest political scandal of the age broken simultaneously with the final, humiliating public downfall of a top member of the Royal Family.

It is a melodrama that might yet turn into a Greek tragedy, with the demise not just of the premier of the day, but the party he leads as well. The pace of events has been breathtaking. Only yesterday, former Prince Andrew was riding his horse in Windsor Great Park, waving shamelessly to photographers.

Today, plain Mr Mountbatten-Windsor is Prince Andrew is now hidden away, exiled internally to a farm in the King’s private estate in Sandringham, stripped of his titles and shamed by revelations from the Eptsein files.

Gone from public life, but not from public gaze. The latest Epstein File expose, in an email from his convicted girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, appears to confirm that it is his arm round 17 year old Virginia Giuffre, who accuses the one-time royal of sexually abusing her. The litany of misery goes on. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, elected only sixteen months ago with a landslide Labour majority, is on the brink of eviction from Downing Street – by his own MPs.

Events are moving at such a fast pace that even the 24-hour news cycle can barely keep pace. Westminster had the most turbulent week that anyone could remember, overshadowing even renewed royal scandal. The thunderclap came at Prime Minister’s Questions, when Tory leader Kemi Badenoch unleashed the simple killer question : “Had Sir Keir known about Peter Mandelson’s continuing relationship with the paedophile financier Epstein before he appointed him US ambassador?”

Labour MPs groaned, and the Opposition roared, when the Starmer was forced to admit: ”Yes, I did.” These three words could end his premiership in days, ministers feared. The fate of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was already sealed, with expulsion from his royal residence accelerated by fresh photographic evidence of him crouched over the prone body of a young woman.

Together, these two sets of events were more shocking, more profound than the 1963 scandal of War Minister John Profumo. He only lied to Parliament about a relationship with good-time girl Chrtsine Keeler. Mandelson consorted with a known child sex offender even when he was in jail, and afterwards.

Harold Macmillan’s Tory government fell the following year. People are betting that the Starmer government might not last that long. Immediately, the by-election in “safe” Gorton and Denton, Greater Manchester in less than three weeks’ time that looked risky for Labour is now a goner.

And MPs and Labour bosses are steeled for big losses in elections for the Welsh and Scottish Parliaments, and council polls in England, in May, which will pile further pressure on Starmer. It looks likely that Downing Street chief of Staff, Morgan McSweeney, will be the first casualty. A protege of Mandelson and the Tony Blair lobbying machine, it was he who pushed the fatal candidature of his former boss for Washington.

But there is a long way to go before the final act of this drama. The Metropolitan Police inquiry into soon-not be Milord Mandy’s sickening affiliation with Epstein will take months. The Crown Prosecution Service must then decide if there is enough evidence to warrant a charge of misconduct in public office – an offence punishable by jail sentence – a trial would follow.

With Mandelson still bleating his innocence of wrongdoing, that process would almost certainly go into next year. If ministers concede a public inquiry, it would roll into election year 2029. Meanwhile, MPs on the all-party Intelligence and Security Committee will decide on what information surrounding Starmer’s incomprehensible, foolish appointment of Epstein’s “best pal” as Our Man in Washington.

What a mess! What an unholy combination of stupidity, arrogance, weakness and contempt for the public lies here. It is no exaggeration to say that trust and confidence in politicians, already low, is at rock-bottom.

And the prestige of the Royal Family has taken a severe hit over the Andrew Affair. Never since the Abdication Crisis of the 1930s has the monarchy been so shamed. But all is not lost. Parliament has reasserted its authority, and is holding this ramshackle Downing Street operation to account. The King has sorted the Andrew catastrophe. The Queen has shown her unwavering support for women and girls facing exploitation.

There are reasons to be, if not cheerful, then at least not as despondent as might now be justified. Life must go on. Starmer got back on his horse, so to speak, in the immediate aftermath of his Commons fiasco, taking the fight against poverty in a Pride in Place policy speech.

The show must go on, but he may have to consider his position at some point, and shoulder the blame for his debacle. The buck stops on his desk. The Tories and Lib Dems are loudly calling for a Commons vote of confidence in the Prime Minister, and there are rumblings of support for such a move on Labour’s Left. Losing that would take down the government, prompting an instant general election. But a leadership contest now would be pointless and counter-productive. Who would be better, or perhaps more accurately, less worse?

Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham has shot himself in the foot. Former deputy PM Angela Rayner, architect of the back-bench strategy to take the information war out of Number Ten’s hands, is still tainted by her housing tax scandal. Health Secretary Wes Streeting, regarded as the front-runner, has been too apologetic about Mandy, wrongly claiming that his second ministerial sacking was wholly exonerated. It was later found justified.

There is no obvious understudy waiting in the wings (though I would put a couple of bob on persuasive Darren Jones, Chief Secretary to the PM, as a dark horse candidate in the future) and government must continue. Starmer has weathered the first blasts of Storm Mandy, and with MPs back in their constituencies this weekend there is less likelihood of a plot emerging to oust him from office.

Home Office minister Mike Tapp said Sir Keir was “absolutely” right to continue as PM. Interest has shifted to the Downing Street operation, with Stroud MP Simon Opher calling for a “clear-out” of the PM’s office, particularly chief of staff Morgan McSweeney “who should be looking for another job.”

Intense speculation surrounds other prominent figures who might be drawn into the scandal, after Number Ten agreed to release all ministerial files relevant to Mandelson’s appointment – including electronic messages – going right back to 2024.

Scotland Yard detectives are expected to begin interviewing. Mandelson on suspicion of misconduct in public office within the next few days, trawling through documentary evidence provided by Downing Street.

Meanwhile, huge challenges face ministers : the cost of living, NHS waiting lists, immigration, the Ukraine war, relations with the egregoius President Trump and a thousand other issues overflow their in-trays. Savage, self-indulgent party in-fighting helps nobody.

It has been a week that many would like to forget. Our way of life has suffered some heavy, unfogettable – and unforgivable – blows. But we have been here before, and worse, and survived. This is not World War Three, or even a new Cold War, though it may shape up to be.

We should count our blessings. We still live in a functioning democracy that is the envy of the world, with a much-loved Royal Family. The system creaks, but the severe constitutional tests to which it is being subjected show that it still works. Britain is not broken. We will muddle through, as we always have done.