President Donald J. Trump may reject the credentials of the far-left British government’s incoming ambassador to the U.S. Labour Party grandee, Lord Peter Mandelson, who previously branded the American President a “bully,” a “danger to the world,” and “little short of a white nationalist and a racist.”
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s choice of the scandal-ridden “Prince of Darkness” for the role generally assigned to career diplomats is inexplicable to many. Mandelson had to resign in disgrace from Tony Blair’s Cabinet on two occasions, only to be given a de facto promotion to the European Commission, where he was also dogged by accusations of wrongdoing. After this, Labour returned him to a Cabinet role under Gordon Brown, despite having promised there was “no question” he would return to government.
He continued to court controversy until Labour’s ouster by the Conservatives in 2010, reportedly calling Jeffrey Epstein for favors while the pedophile financier was in prison for soliciting minors.
CHINA TIES.
In 2018, Mandelson wrote an article denigrating Trump’s approach to China, insisting it was “absurd to imagine putting a country of such weight in the naughty corner.”
“It is also necessary to recognize Mr. Trump’s behavior for what it is: he is a bully and a mercantilist who thinks the U.S. will gain in trade only when others are losing,” Mandelson complained. “His idea of a progressive trade policy is one that forces everyone else to give the U.S. more favorable treatment rather than a trading system from which everyone gains.”
Figures close to Trump have expressed displeasure at such an “absolute moron” being put forward to represent Britain in America, citing his links to Communist China as much as his past criticism of President Trump.
An advisory firm co-founded by Mandelson, Global Counsel, has courted Chinese companies, including ByteDance—the parent company of TikTok—as clients. Sources close to Trump suggest that if his credentials are approved, conditions may be attached—such as severing any remaining business links of this nature.
No British ambassador has ever had their credentials rejected before. Among allies of the U.S., such actions are exceedingly rare.
Image by World Economic Forum swiss-image.ch/Photo by Remy Steinegger.