40 resultsfor “Mandelson vetting documents release”
release vetting documents about Mandelson to the Cabinet Office. Little’s department has been gathering
release documents that reveal those facts, and other information about Mandelson’s security vetting, to the parliamentary
release documents relating to Mandelson’s vetting through the [humble address process](https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/feb/04/peter-mandelson-disclosures-what-is-humble-address-parliament).
documents relating to Lord Mandelson's vetting and appointment are set to be released imminently
release of all papers relating to Mandelson’s appointment. In an extraordinary intervention earlier this month, the intelligence and security committee (ISC) publicly accused the government of withholding some Mandelson vetting documents
Mandelson anyway, that the vetting body had considered him to be “a borderline case”. A nine-page summary document compiled by UK Security Vetting (UKSV) was not released
Mandelson vetting documents Ministers have faced renewed cross-party pressure in parliament over documents missing from a 1,500-page release
released to parliament stated that national security adviser, Jonathan Powell, had doubts about Mandelson’s appointment, describing it as “weirdly rushed”, but crucially the documents do not disclose that Mandelson failed security vetting
released a template page from the summary document produced by UKSV after Mandelson’s vetting
Mandelson documents before their release under the humble address, [criticised the government for withholding his vetting
documents that show Mandelson failed the security vetting checks. Any such decision could amount to an extraordinary breach of a parliamentary vote, known as a humble address, that ordered the release
Mandelson’s failure to secure vetting approval has not previously been publicly revealed, despite intense scrutiny over his appointment and the release by the government of 147 pages of documents
release “all papers” relevant to Mandelson’s appointment. The wording of the motion referenced documents “including but not confined” to various branches of government, including UK Security Vetting
vetting for [Peter Mandelson](https://www.theguardian.com/politics/peter-mandelson) before announcing an appointment, documents reveal. The documents released
documents before their release under the humble address process, criticised the government for [withholding Mandelson’s vetting
document including details of Mandelson’s personal life, and financial and business dealings – which the prime minister is also believed to have now seen – as well as the recommendation that Mandelson had failed vetting
vetting (and concluded that Mandelson should not). She is also the civil servant ultimately responsible for complying with the so-called “humble address”: the parliamentary motion passed in February requiring the government to release
Mandelson’s failure to secure vetting approval had not previously been publicly revealed, despite intense scrutiny over his appointment and the release by the government of documents
released. However, the Guardian reported that senior government officials have been considering whether to withhold documents from Parliament revealing Lord Mandelson was not given vetting
Mandelson a “high concern”. The Cabinet Office on Friday published a template of that file on its website.  The Cabinet Office released this