Peter Mandelson Invokes Press Harassment Protections To Dodge Questions About His Support Of Jeffrey Epstein
from the what-are-you-hiding-peter? dept
Peter Mandelson—the former UK cabinet minister who was just sacked as Britain’s ambassador to the United States over newly revealed emails with Jeffrey Epstein—has found a novel way to avoid answering questions about why he told a convicted sex offender “your friends stay with you and love you” and urged him to “fight for early release.” He got the UK press regulator to send a memo to all UK media essentially telling them to leave him alone.
The National published what they describe as the “secret notice” that went out:
CONFIDENTIAL – STRICTLY NOT FOR PUBLICATION: Ipso has asked us to circulate the following advisory:
Ipso has today been contacted by a representative acting on behalf of Peter Mandelson.
Mr Mandelson’s representatives state that he does not wish to speak to the media at this time. He requests that the press do not take photos or film, approach, or contact him via phone, email, or in-person. His representatives ask that any requests for his comment are directed to [REDACTED]
We are happy to make editors aware of his request. We note the terms of Clause 2 (Privacy) and 3 (Harassment) of the Editors’ Code, and in particular that Clause 3 states that journalists must not persist in questioning, telephoning, pursuing or photographing individuals once asked to desist, unless justified in the public interest.
Clauses 2 and 3 of the UK Editor’s Code—the privacy and harassment provisions—exist primarily to protect genuinely vulnerable people from press intrusion. Grieving families. Crime victims. People suffering genuine harassment.
Mandelson is invoking them to avoid answering questions about his documented friendship with one of history’s most notorious pedophiles—a friendship so extensive and problematic that it just cost him his job as ambassador to the United States, days before a presidential state visit.
According to Politico, the UK Foreign Office withdrew Mandelson “with immediate effect” after emails showed the relationship was far deeper than previously known:
In a statement the U.K. Foreign Office said Mandelson had been withdrawn as ambassador “with immediate effect” after emails showed “the depth and extent” of his relationship with Epstein was “materially different from that known at the time of his appointment.”
“In particular Peter Mandelson’s suggestion that Jeffrey Epstein’s first conviction was wrongful and should be challenged is new information,” the statement added.
So we have a senior political figure who just got fired over revelations that he told a convicted sex offender his prosecution was “wrongful” and should be challenged, who maintained this friendship for years longer than he’d admitted, and his response is to invoke press harassment protections?
The notice does include the important qualifier “unless justified in the public interest.” And it’s hard to imagine a clearer case of public interest: a senior diplomat, just sacked from his post, over previously undisclosed communications with a convicted pedophile, in which he expressed support for challenging that pedophile’s conviction. If that’s not public interest, the term has no meaning.
But the mere act of circulating this notice creates a chilling effect. It puts journalists on notice that pursuing this story could result in complaints to the regulator. It’s using the machinery of press regulation as a shield against legitimate accountability journalism.
Now, to be fair, one could imagine scenarios where even a disgraced public figure might legitimately invoke harassment protections—it wasn’t that long ago there was a whole scandal in the UK with journalists hacking the voicemails of famous people. But that’s not what’s happening here. Mandelson is invoking these provisions to avoid being asked questions at all. “Please don’t inquire about why I told a convicted pedophile his prosecution was wrongful” is not the kind of harm these rules were designed to prevent.
This is who Mandelson has always been: someone who sees regulatory and governmental machinery as tools to be deployed on behalf of whoever he’s serving at the moment. Back in 2009, we covered how he returned from a vacation with entertainment industry mogul David Geffen and almost immediately started pushing for aggressive new copyright enforcement measures, including kicking people off the internet for file sharing. As we wrote at the time, he had what we called a “sudden conversion” to Hollywood’s position on internet enforcement that happened to coincide suspiciously with his socializing with entertainment industry executives.
Back then, the machinery was deployed to serve entertainment executives who wanted harsher copyright enforcement. Now it’s being deployed to serve Mandelson himself.
There’s a broader pattern here that goes beyond one UK politician. The Epstein revelations have been remarkable not just for what they’ve revealed about who associated with him, but for how consistently the response from the powerful has been to deflect, deny, and deploy every available mechanism to avoid genuine accountability. Some have used their media platforms to try to reshape the narrative. Some have simply refused to comment.
Mandelson is trying to use the press regulatory system itself.
It’s worth noting that The National chose to publish the “confidential – strictly not for publication” memo anyway, explicitly citing the public interest. Good for them. Because if there’s one thing that absolutely serves the public interest, it’s shining a light on attempts by the powerful to use the systems meant to protect the vulnerable as shields for their own accountability.
Mandelson’s representatives say he “does not wish to speak to the media at this time.” That’s his right to request—but no media should have to agree to his terms. Weaponizing press regulation to create a cone of silence around questions of obvious public interest is something else entirely. It’s elite impunity dressed up in the language of press ethics.
Filed Under: free speech, harassment, ipso, jeffrey epstein, peter mandelson, press freedom, press regulations, uk


Comments on “Peter Mandelson Invokes Press Harassment Protections To Dodge Questions About His Support Of Jeffrey Epstein”
I hope he goes to prison for using his political connections for the enrichment of his friends and benefactors, and I hope Blair, Starmer and others are taken down with him. Neoliberalism is pushing this country into the hands of the far right because everything the New Labour project has offered is failure and corruption, with supposed liberals going ‘Well, Farage has a point’ at every turn to keep the racism, xenophobia and bigotry flowing.
Re:
If he goes to prison, he should make sure the cameras in the prison corridors are functioning.
Mike, you write as if IPSO (the ‘regulator’ in this instance) was some sort of powerful body, perhaps with legal powers. It’s not. It’s a body set up by a section of the print media in the UK and entirely funded by them. It is a trade body with powers of sanction (to fine or investigate newspapers which are members of IPSO) which it has never used. It is one of two separate regulators, and UK newspapers have a choice about whether to join or not. If you want to know more about the failings of IPSO, go to the hackedoff.org website.
Re:
It is an independent regulatory agency setup by the government under a royal charter, as is commonly done for regulatory agencies in the UK. While membership is voluntary, non-members have increased liability under libel laws and are required to pay the plaintiff’s legal costs, while members have a special arbitration system for legal disputes, decreased liability, and have their legal costs paid by the plaintiff if the matter involves a real court instead of the arbitration system.
Simple solution
Well, he just needs to leave England, come to the US, bend a knee to our king and he can get a pardon. If he badmouths Democrats and Biden, that will fast-track things for him.
Good lord.
Nah. I hope this pos is harassed so much his family leaves him and he kills himself like he deserves.
I'm Mandy, I lie
This was sent out six days ago now and the only other mentions in the UK media I’ve seen are from The Canary (a lefty publication) and a reprint of the National story in the Dorset Echo (!), so suppression by consent is working as intended.
Our courts and enquiries work even more slowly than in the US specially when there are influential people to protect and today saw Paul Dacre ex editor of the Mail in the High Court defending the hacking etc from 20 years and more ago (he didn’t know about it of course).
There’s a lot of public interest because Prince Harry and assorted film stars were allegedly victims but it’s unlikely any public good will come of it or they’ll see any proper redress.
Everyone has known for years what Mandy was like except his employers
Mandelson discussed by HIGNFY: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U5w-oxgmwTY
Re: Same old tactics
Clip 2 (at 2:05) has Mandelson – a Cabinet minister in 1998 – persuading the BBC’s then Director General John Birt to send a letter banning any mention of his private life on any BBC programme after a guest on Newsnight said that Mandelson was gay.
Oh, the poor dear...
Well, clearly the clause protecting the grieving should apply here, after all, the poor chap’s clearly deep in mourning for his BEST FRIEND IN THE WHOLE WORLD, THE CONVICTED SEX TRAFFICKING PAEDOPHILE.
This is a heartbreaking loss for the man, and that’s really what the news media needs to centre, I think. That the two were so close, so inseparable, that to have all this dredged up again is a truly traumatic for THE WORLD’S MOST NOTORIOUS SEX TRAFFICKER OF THE UNDERAGE’S CLOSEST, AND DEAREST FRIEND, and we should all think long and hard on that, and what it means.