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‘Calamity Keir’ Starmer sacked Mandelson, now faces challenge of replacing ‘Trump whisperer’

FP News Desk September 12, 2025, 19:58:49 IST

PM Keir Starmer sacks UK’s US envoy Peter Mandelson over Epstein ties, sparking a scramble to replace the ‘Trump whisperer’ ahead of Trump’s UK visit.

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British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Reuters File
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Reuters File

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s abrupt dismissal of UK ambassador to Washington Peter Mandelson has triggered a storm that risks overshadowing Donald Trump’s planned state visit to the UK next week, with questions mounting over who can step into the role of managing Britain’s most sensitive diplomatic relationship.

Mandelson, once seen as a consummate political fixer, was dubbed a “Trump whisperer” for his ability to smooth ties with the US president. His downfall came after newly published court documents revealed his long-standing friendship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, whom Mandelson described in an email as his “best pal.”

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The disclosures proved too toxic for Starmer’s government to defend, leaving the ambassador with little choice but to resign.

The timing, however, could hardly be worse. Trump’s upcoming state visit was meant to showcase stability in the “special relationship” after months of turbulence. Instead, the UK finds itself scrambling to project credibility.

Starmer’s aides admit privately that Mandelson’s departure leaves a vacuum in Washington, where his personal rapport with Trump had offered London a rare channel of influence.

In the short term, deputy envoy James Roscoe will step in as acting ambassador. But attention has already turned to Mandelson’s successor, with the Financial Times listing former Foreign Secretary David Miliband, ex-Chancellor George Osborne, and former ambassador to Washington Karen Pierce as frontrunners. Whoever takes the role will inherit the delicate task of managing Trump, whose unpredictability has unnerved European leaders.

Starmer himself faces intensified scrutiny. His government has already been on the defensive over Britain’s sluggish economy, prompting a recent Cabinet reshuffle. Critics have seized on Mandelson’s sacking as further evidence of drift at the top, with one tabloid branding the prime minister “Calamity Keir.” The opposition has demanded assurances that Mandelson’s links to Epstein were properly vetted before his appointment.

Analysts warn that Starmer’s ability to contain the fallout will shape perceptions of his leadership abroad as much as at home. “Losing your ambassador in Washington on the eve of a state visit is about as bad as it gets,” one former diplomat told the Daily Mail. “Mandelson may have been controversial, but he knew how to get Trump’s ear. That sort of access is not easily replaced.”

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With Trump due to land in London within days, the challenge for Downing Street is twofold: steadying relations with Washington while reassuring voters that the prime minister can steer Britain out of yet another political storm. For Starmer, the episode is less about Mandelson’s personal downfall than about the test of whether his government can project authority when it is needed most.

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