TV favourite Alex Scott and Lionesses icons are being tipped for glory ahead of this year’s glitzy Women’s Football Awards on May 7, hosted by Gabby Logan and Jamie Carragher
Television favourite Alex Scott and a host of Lionesses legends are being tipped for success ahead of this year’s glamorous Women’s Football Awards.
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The beautiful game is set to meet serious showbiz glamour when the ceremony takes place on May 7.
The former England international-turned-presenter leads a star-studded shortlist filled with household names and global superstars as the biggest night in women’s football makes its return.
The ceremony will be presented by Gabby Logan alongside Jamie Carragher, with Sir David Beckham also lending his support to the awards as the women’s game continues its remarkable growth.
Becks said: “It’s been so incredible to see the growth of the women’s game over the years and we love cheering on the Lionesses in our house! These awards celebrate the very best in the game both on and off the pitch.”
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The Women’s Football Awards – now the largest celebration of its kind in Europe – will once again unite elite players, celebrity supporters and industry leaders to recognise those pushing the game forward.
Past winners include Alessia Russo, Mary Earps and Alex Scott herself – and with Lionesses stars dominating the shortlist once more, the competition is fiercer than ever.
Global fashion powerhouse Shein returns as headline partner, with the brand taking centre stage when it comes to the glamour. It will also play a crucial role in styling football stars and grassroots female footballers for the high-profile occasion.
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Shihong Liu, Director of Europe Markets at Shein, expressed: “We are incredibly proud to continue our partnership with the Women’s Football Awards. Women’s football is one of the fastest-growing and most exciting sports in the world, and it plays such an important role in inspiring the next generation. We’re honoured to support the game and celebrate the incredible athletes and community behind it.”
Emelia Newman admits she is “obsessed” by the prospect of renovating her property on a budget, and recently showcased work on her hallway after lifting the room’s carpet
Alan Johnson Social News Reporter
10:43, 18 Apr 2026Updated 10:43, 18 Apr 2026
A woman who removed the “horrendous” old carpet from her property during a renovation project has expressed her bewilderment at what she discovered under it. Emelia Newman, who runs her own lampshade business, took to TikTok sharing that she was “praying for wooden floorboards” as she rolled back the underlay.
Admitting she is “obsessed” with making her home “look high-end without spending a fortune”, she soon spoke of her relief in a video. “Such a satisfying moment ripping up that horrendous old carpet!” Emelia said, before asking her followers for advice: “But also, help – what do I do now? Sand it? Varnish it? Leave it?”
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Indeed, her short clip concluded with her uncovering just what she’d wished for in her hallway in the form of flooring that oozed potential.
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In a follow-up video, meanwhile, Emelia showcased the completed project. “So what do you think of the finished hallway?” she questioned.
“I’m so chuffed I did it all myself and honestly it really does make me smile every time I open the front door! The power of pattern and colour.”
Opting to keep the wooden floorboards exactly as she’d found them, Emelia complemented them with a new patterned wallpaper whilst adding a series of framed pictures – using pages from magazines – to the walls of the room.
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She also installed a feature shelf above the radiator, placing a lamp and plant on it to add to the relaxed vibe.
“Love the wallpaper and love that you used it over the thermostat to cover it!” one TikTok user penned in response. “Very tricky.”
To which Emelia confessed: “Thank you! Yes it was tricky haha, but I would have annoyed me so much if I hadn’t done something about it.”
Opening up about her project, she explained: “I’m not an interior designer. I’m just obsessed with interior design.
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“I genuinely love spending my free time trawling through thousands of lampshades, curtains, bedside tables… you name it… to find the ones that look expensive, but don’t actually cost that much.”
Emelia added that she hopes to share her finds with “two types of people” – those who want beautiful homes without spending large amounts of money decorating, and those who don’t have the time to carry out their own research on affordable alternatives.
“It’s all about truly loving the things going in your home and trying not to be swayed by what’s trendy,” she elaborated.
New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium will host games including the final (Picture: AMA/Getty Images)
England fans will have to pay over £100 to get to one of their World Cup group games by train with prices hugely inflated ahead of this summer’s competition.
The MetLife Stadium in New Jersey will host seven games this summer, including England’s group match against Panama and the final on 19 July.
It is a staggering price increase brought in specifically for this summer’s competition, nearly 12 times the usual $12.90 fare for a return trip.
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40,000 football fans are expected to use mass transit for each of the games at the venue. Alternative methods for getting to the MetLife Stadium are also pricey with limited car parking spaces at the site costing £225 (£166).
NJ Transit officially confirmed the pricing on Friday.
England face Panama in their final group match on 27 June at the Stadium with Brazil, France and Germany also in action there.
A return ticket will set up back $150 (Picture: Getty)
New Jersey Governor, Mikie Sherril defended the price hike, insisting locals would ‘not be stuck with the tab’ for the first World Cup across the Atlantic since 1994.
”Fifa should pay for the rides,’ Sherril said. ‘But if they don’t – I’m not going to let New Jersey get taken for one.”
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The journey from New York City to the stadium takes 15 minutes (Picture: Getty_
Sherrill’s comments did not sit well with Fifa who claimed transport issues were discussed well in advance of the World Cup.
‘Ever since the host city agreements were signed in 2018, Fifa has worked in collaboration with the Host Committees and their partners to develop a transportation plan that provides efficient and accessible mass transit options for ticketed fans attending the eight matches at NY NJ Stadium,’ World Cup chief event operations officer Heimo Schirigi said in a statement first reported by Front Office Sports.
‘The goal is to minimize congestion, reduce reliance on private vehicles, and ensure the fan experience is positive and memorable defined by the action on the pitch, not delays on the road.
‘The NJ Transit current pricing model will have a chilling effect. Elevated fares inevitably push fans toward alternative transportation options. This increases concerns of congestion, late arrivals, and creates broader ripple effects that ultimately diminish the economic benefit and lasting legacy the entire region stands to gain from hosting the World Cup.’
There are a range of activities on offer from wakeboarding to yoga
An aqua park situated in “idyllic and lush English countryside”, is set to reopen on Saturday, May 2 – just in time for the bank holiday weekend. Southlake Waterpark in Little Paxton, near St Neots, not only has an aqua park, but also paddle boarding, open water swimming, a boat driving hub, and yoga by the lakes.
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The venue is set within three freshwater lakes, and offers free parking on-site along with changing facilities, showers, and toilets. The aqua park features a large inflatable course with two big slides, and if you’re looking for that extra thrill, it has a large ramp to jump off into the water.
If you fancy something with a bit more adrenaline, then they offer lessons in waterskiing, wakeboarding, kneeboarding, wake-skating, and Ringo rides. Lessons are led by coaches and anyone at any skill level can have a go. Ringo rides are a good option for groups, as up to five people can ride at the same time.
For a more chilled activity, there is paddleboarding. While more experienced paddleboarder will be able to make their way gracefully around the lake, it may involve a bit more concentration and balance for a beginner. It’s a great way to have a laugh with friends and family all in the serene setting of the lake. Open water swimming is also available if you want to ditch the board.
If you’d rather stay on dry land, then there are yoga classes right on the edge of the lake. In the spring and summer, classes take place outside in a beautifully decorated marquee, with the addition of heating and blankets during the colder months. Classes should leave you feeling chilled out and relaxed. For that added bit of excitement while still staying dry, you could learn to drive a boat at the boat driving hub.
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The aqua park, which is large enough to host up to 100 people per session, is available for children aged six and up. Users will need to be a minimum of 120cm tall and have the ability to swim 25m unaided.
The park will be operating 11am to 6pm everyday and costs £17 per 50-minute session, per participant. A second consecutive session on the same day costs £8.50. It costs £15 to rent a paddle board for a 50-minute session or alternatively, visitors can bring their own paddle board, kayak, or canoe to use on-site for £7 per person, per session.
From competitive swimmers or those who simply enjoy a wild swim, Southlake Waterpark offers open water swimming sessions running from April 18 until October 31, 2026 for £5 per swim.
Reviews have described the venue as a “really fun and interactive experience” with a “great lake to swim in”. One review said: “Fantastic inflatables – best and biggest we’ve experienced. My 9 year old son and I had the time of our lives.
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“Loads to enjoy for all ages (adults included!). Friendly staff and atmosphere, clean and tidy changing rooms with free lockers to store belongings. We’ll definitely be back again!”
Another review said: “Excellent afternoon. I haven’t laughed so much for ages and the kids really enjoyed it too. Glad that we all decided to have a go. I would have been really envious watching even though I struggled to get on the inflatables.”
Matt Fitzpatrick ended day two of the RBC Heritage with a one-shot lead after carding an eight-under-par 63.
The Englishman made eight birdies, including sinking a 36-foot putt on hole 15, in a bogey-free second round at Hilton Head.
“Yeah, it was lucky, there’s no two ways about it,” Fitzpatrick said. “Sometimes you need that in a week, so it’s nice to get, and then even nicer to take advantage of it.”
Fitzpatrick – the 2022 US Open champion – began Friday in a six-way tie for third following an opening round of 65.
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Matt Fitzpatrick has the lead at Hilton Head (Getty)
“I wouldn’t say I striped it today, but at least I kind of kept the ball in front of me, and that’s what you’re trying to do on this golf course,” Hovland said.
The 31-year-old tops the leaderboard on 14 under par at the halfway stage, with Norway’s Viktor Hovland one stroke behind after retaining second spot with a second-round score of 65.
Overnight leader Ludvig Aberg dropped to joint fourth position following three bogeys on the back nine.
Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre ended the day six shots behind Fitzpatrick after posting a 68, while world number one Scottie Scheffler carded a 67 and is seven shots off the pace.
Siobhian Brown, SNP candidate for Ayr, said: “As per our manifesto commitment, we recognise women face abuse in their everyday lives and need increased protection against this – that’s why we will bring forward a Misogyny Bill to legislate to ensure harassment and abuse based on misogyny is outlawed in Scotland.”
Passengers claim they thought pilot was “joking” when he stepped out of the cockpit to make the announcement.
09:55, 18 Apr 2026Updated 10:00, 18 Apr 2026
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A group of passengers were kicked off an easyJet plane because it was “too heavy” to take-off. Holidaymakers heading to Malaga were stunned when the pilot stepped out of the cockpit and told them the aircraft was over weight limits for the runway.
Passengers claimed they were told if people didn’t disembark, all the luggage would need to be left behind at Southend Airport. Kelly Wayand, who was travelling with her mum, disabled dad and partner, said she “couldn’t believe what was happening” and thought it was a joke at first.
Independent travel agent Kelly, 45, added: “It was bizarre, I had never heard anything like it before. The pilot came out of his cockpit and told everyone we couldn’t set off unless six of us got off the plane.
“He said it was either that or we leave all of the luggage behind. I was travelling with my dad, who is disabled, my mum, and my partner, so it would have been hard work for us to get off.”
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Although Kelly and her family weren’t able to get off, another group made the sacrifice to allow the flight to go ahead. Kelly said: “Five people got off fairly quickly in around 10 minutes.”
As reported by The Mirror, the five kind flyers who decided to take the hit received a round of applause from their fellow passengers. Carly Mowbray was also on the April 11 flight.
She said: “The people who got off departed to a round of applause from those of us that stayed. The flight crew said they had not experienced it before. There were already 10 empty seats before the extra passengers got off.”
Flight records reveal the aircraft – an Airbus A319 – was scheduled to depart at 8.40am but actually took off at 8.59am. According to Airbus, an A319 has a maximum take-off weight of 75.50 tonnes.
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EasyJet released a statement saying: “Five passengers on flight EJU7008 from Southend to Malaga volunteered to travel on alternative flights as a result of the aircraft being over the weight limits for the weather conditions and the short length of the runway. Weight restrictions are in place for all airlines for safety reasons.”
The budget airline added: “The customers were provided with transport and a later flight to Malaga on the same day, free of charge, from London Gatwick and we have been in touch with them to provide the compensation they are entitled to, in line with regulations. The safety and welfare of our passengers and crew is always easyJet’s highest priority.”
Under UK261 regulations, passengers who are denied boarding for a medium-haul flight such as between Southend and Malaga are entitled to £175 or £350 compensation, depending on the duration of the delay.
There is often a perception that geographical distance reduces vulnerability – an idea that can be particularly appealing in neutral countries with long-standing stable and strong economies.
Switzerland is a clear example: its long-standing neutrality, formally recognised at the Congress of Vienna in 1815 and still recognised as a central part of its foreign policy, combined with its economic strength, has helped keep it outside major conflicts historically and reinforced the perception that distance, stability and wealth provide protection.
But in a world where energy, food, finance and even the atmosphere are tightly interconnected, distance (and neutrality) doesn’t shield Switzerland, or any other nation.
Take the Strait of Hormuz. Roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and liquified natural gas passes through it. When it’s disrupted, the effects don’t stay local; they ripple outward through longer shipping routes, strained supply chains and shifting economic decisions in ways that reach far beyond the countries directly involved and could cause long-term environmental damage.
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More often than not, this appears as subtle environmental and economic changes rather than sudden shocks.
Switzerland offers a particularly instructive example. It is neither an energy exporter nor a strategic actor in the conflict. Yet it sits at the intersection of multiple global systems: shipping and transport routes, European agriculture, high-value manufacturing and international finance.
Shipping routes and ice melt
When maritime routes are disrupted, as is currently happening, shipping does not stop. It adapts. Tankers take longer routes and fuel efficiency declines. The result is an increase in particulate emissions, including black carbon. These particles can travel vast distances. In high-altitude environments, their impact is amplified. When deposited on snow and ice, black carbon reduces reflectivity, increasing heat absorption and accelerating melt. In the Swiss Alps, where glaciers are already under pressure, even small increases can have measurable effects. Therefore, what begins as a logistical adjustment in global shipping can end up altering the physical state of distant mountain systems.
Switzerland’s industrial base offers another useful illustration. When firms face restricted or more expensive products, they often shift to alternative production methods. For instance, in the pharmaceutical industry, disruptions to chemical supply chains can force firms to switch suppliers or change elements used in production. While this may make economic sense, such changes are often not environmentally neutral. Different processes generate different byproducts, introducing new compounds into waste streams. The result may not be an immediate environmental crisis, but could create a gradual shift in the composition of pollutants.
Another example is the global fertiliser trade. In 2024, Iran, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain together accounted for 23% of global ammonia trade, 34% of global urea trade, and 18% of global ammoniated phosphate trade, key inputs for fertiliser production. Disruptions do not simply raise prices; they constrain availability, forcing adjustments across farming systems worldwide.
In parts of Europe, including Switzerland, there could be some positive and negative affects on the environment. Reduced fertiliser use may lower nutrient runoff into waterways, easing pressure on rivers such as the Rhine River and improving conditions in some lakes. Ecosystems long stressed by excess nitrogen may experience a degree of relief. Yet this comes with trade-offs. Swiss agriculture depends on high levels of this type of fertiliser and so may see declining yields and shifts in crops if this is reduced. Alpine pastures, in particular, depend on carefully managed nutrient balances influenced by nitrogen availability. Change can disrupt that equilibrium, exposing how deeply even local ecosystems depend on global supply chains.
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Shipping routes are getting longer because of constraints on travelling through the Strait of Hormuz.
Environmental change can also be shaped by investment decisions. In periods of geopolitical tension, capital tends to become more cautious. Liquidity, resilience and short-term risk management take priority over long-term projects.
Finance and migration
For financial centres such as Switzerland – home to huge reinsurance firms such as Swiss Re – this shift matters. Roughly 25% of total global cross-border assets (financial investments outside your home country) are managed in Switzerland. When uncertainty rises, risk models are recalibrated and capital is redirected.
The unintended consequence is that long-term environmental investments – such as ecosystem restoration – can be delayed or scaled back. Environmental resilience depends on steady, long-term commitment; interruptions, even temporary ones, could be detrimental.
Large-scale conflicts also tend to reshape migration patterns, sometimes indirectly. Even countries that are not primary destinations can experience increased migration or adjust policies in response to broader European dynamics. In small countries such as Switzerland, even modest population increases translate into land-use pressures.
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Housing demand pushes outward, infrastructure expands, and previously marginal areas come into use. Reports suggest that agricultural land in Switzerland is reducing. Approximately one square metre is lost every second, with about 80% converted into settlement areas and the remaining 20% transitioning into forests. The environmental impact is gradual: increased resource consumption, greater strain on water and waste systems. None of these changes is dramatic on its own, but together they form a pattern of slow encroachment.
The effects of distant conflicts on neutral or far away countries are rarely direct. They are mediated through systems that operate quietly, often below the threshold of public attention.
Switzerland is not unique in this respect. It is simply a clear example: a country where environmental conditions are closely tracked, where economic systems are deeply integrated, and where small shifts can be observed with unusual precision. Neutrality may shape foreign policy, but it does not deliver environmental or economic immunity. In an interconnected world, exposure is universal.
LORD Robertson’s recent Strategic Defence Review recommendations must be acted upon with regards to defence spending and the development of our defence capability.
The obvious ways to fund defence is by reducing current welfare spending where we spend 10.3 per cent of GDP in comparison to 2.3per cent of GDP on defence.
The Government also needs to increase taxation to fund defence spending.
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We also need to look at how we can resource recruitment in our reservist and cadet forces which may include conscription. We cannot afford to not deliver quickly on these recommendations.
It’s viewed that Russia will be as powerful as NATO militarily by the end of the decade.
The time to act and deliver is now. The country has been failed for the past 20 years in our defence spending.
Let’s hope this Government changes that – it’s had plenty of warnings what we need to do to improve our nation’s protection.
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Failure to do so will lead to potential catastrophic consequences.
We can’t say we haven’t been warned.
John Jones,
Birch Close,
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York
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York’s got talent!
THE talented and well synchronised Northern Lights A Cappella group of Durham University appeared on BBC1 Breakfast TV on Monday morning, April 13 and in the evening on Look North.
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They recently won the UK championship in this distinctive style of music with movement, earning them a spot in the world finals (International Championship of Collegiate A Cappella) in New York later this month.
One of the students’ strong points, a speciality of theirs, is choreography. ‘Syncopation’ could be their middle name!
Last year they came third in the world championships against stiff competition from American universities. Fingers crossed (in unison) for this year!
Two of the 16-strong ensemble are Durham students from York; Alex – ‘beatboxer’ and Will – bass.
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Google the group and find out more. It’s fun; it’s clever; it’s catchy!
Derek Reed,
Middlethorpe Drive,
York
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Amman United Youth overcame Pontypool United 30-13 in the WRU U-18s Cup final at the Principality Stadium to spark wonderful celebrations
Wales legend Shane Williams is celebrating one of his greatest Principality Stadium triumphs after guiding Amman United Youth to WRU U18s Cup glory on Friday night.
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The former winger is one of the coaches at the side where it all began for him, with his son Carter starting on the wing against Pontypool United. Amman, who only re-started their youth team two years ago, beat Pontypool United 30-13 at the iconic venue.
It was a second heartbreaking final defeat in a row for Pontypool United, who were beaten in the last moments by Llandeilo last year.
Amman United were deserved winners, scoring three tries to one in a ferocious encounter that was a credit to both sides. There were wonderful scenes after the final whistle as the young Amman players celebrated the greatest win of their lives at the Principality in front of family and friends.
Williams had said: “We’ve come through some tough games this season and this Amman team has grown up together. I first met most of these lads when they were eight and I’ve come through with them, and my son Carter, since then.”
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Captain Ceian Lewis led from the front, setting the tone with a bruising early hit, while Lewis Appleby and Charlie Gregory impressed in defence for Pontypool United.
A tight first half saw Amman’s Toby Slater and United’s Tom Howard exchange penalties before Wales U18 back rower Cole Lacey crossed for the first try after sustained pressure just before the break. It meant Williams’ side lead 10-6 at half-time with still all to play for.
The second-half could not have started any better for the Amman as James Bentley intercepted a pass on on his own 22 and sprinted 70 metres to score at the other end. This time it was coach Williams’ son, Carter, who added the conversion to put daylight between the teams
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Pontypool United refused to go away, though, as co-captain Reuben Malsom barged over from a five metre penalty to cut the deficit to just four points once more.
But Amman found another gear, with Aled Davies racing over following a clinical move from a scrum. Williams converted and put the final nail in the coffin with two penalties.
Scorers:
Pontypool United: Try: Reuben Malson; Con: Tom Howard; Pens: Tom Howard 2.
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Amman United: Tries: Cole Lacey, James Bentley, Aled Davies; Cons: Carter Williams 2, Toby Slater 2; Pens: Carter Williams 2,
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Pontypool United: Jack McDonagh; Luca Grocott-Mason, Lewis Appleby, Charlie Gregory, Alfie Prosser; Thomas Howard, Daniel Parker; Logan Leonard, Cae Jones (co-captain), Scott Crewe, Ralph Evans, Reuben Malson (co-captain), Rudi Creel, Bailey Stride, Jake Sheppard
Reps: Ieuan Hockaday, George Jones, Max Jacob, Dewi Bainton, Coel Adams, Lewis Jenkins, Charlie Burrows, Danny Hutchinson
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Amman United: Cian Evans; Carter Williams, James Bentley, Kennedy Richards (co-captain), Aled Davies; Toby Slater, Iwan Bull; Ceian Lewis (co-captain), Griff Rees, David Thomas, Tom James, Dyfan Llewelyn, Cole Lacey, Jac Cloke, Hefin Davies
Its main focus is to exposure liars and anyone vulnerable to blackmail.
The vetting system is intentionally intrusive. It is believed to cost at least £80,000 per person, and involves cross-checking every detail of the subject’s personal lives.
Those who have been through it know that the key is candour when faced with the searching questions in interviews about the use of porn, your sex life, drug and drinking experiences and habits, affairs, kinks, family contacts, travel history.
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Agents for the United Kingdom Security Vetting service will use every possible resource, overt and covert, to scrutinise candidates.
Peter Mandelson walks outside his residence in London on Friday (Reuters)
Open source information on friendships abroad, foreign contacts, financial relationships, associations with known convicted criminals would emerge. So would gaps in financial reporting, unexplained loans and gifts would be highlighted.
“These are all the necessary parts of making sure that whatever is in someone’s background that makes them vulnerable – we know about it – so that they are less likely to be pressed into betraying their country for financial gain or through blackmail,” said a UK-based former civil servant who has gone through the vetting process.
“You can admit to some quite dodgy stuff and still pass, but lying is a red flag fail.”
Mandelson, who was known anyway to have been friends with Jeffrey Epstein prior to the latter’s convictions for sex crimes, was announced as the British ambassador to Washington on 20 December 2025.
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He was in post by 25 February the following year, which meant that his clearance was pushed up the queue ahead of others in less exalted positions.
Typically, security sources have explained to The Independent, that involves the urgent interviewing of close friends and associates of Mandelson by officials from the vetting agency.
Handout document issued by the US Department of Justice which shows Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Lord Peter Mandelson with paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein (US Department of Justice)
They ask probing and, for ordinary civilians, often highly intrusive questions about candidates. These answers are then used to check the honesty of what the candidate says in their own interviews.
Mandelson would, it should be assumed, have been asked to explain the receipt of several payments from Jeffrey Epstein, as well as payments from the alleged people trafficker to his now husband – after Epstein’s conviction.
Mandelson has said publicly that he cannot recall these payments. It is not clear that such an answer would have satisfied UKSV.
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He has further denied an impropriety amid allegations, revealed in the Epstein files published in the US, that allegedly suggest he lobbied the UK government on banking and other financial issues that Epstein had an interest in, and that he forwarded market sensitive government material to Epstein while he was business secretary in 2009.
Mandelsom’s flights at Epstein’s expense, his stays on Epstein’s property, would have, or should have, been known about and explained in DV interviews with the UKSV as they were recorded in flight logs.
Emails between the two men, and these other details, led to Mandelson being fired as ambassador to Washington.
Sir Olly Robbins, who was the civil service head of the foreign office when Mandelson took over, has resigned over his department’s decision to overrule the UKSV and give Mandelson access to the most secret of secrets and most secret relationships that any British official could encounter.
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Donald Trump shakes hands with British ambassador to the United States Peter Mandelson after making a trade announcement in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on May 8, 2025 (AFP/Getty)
Mandelson’s day to day job involved being privy to bilateral intelligence of the kind even hidden from the Five Eyes shared system of the Anglosphere involving the UK, US, Canada, New Zealand and Australia.
He would have been present for, or hosted, informal chats with top American intelligence officials and the heads of British intelligence agencies.
Tories have, inevitably, called for the head of the prime minister Sir Keir Starmer. Tom Tugendhat, Conservative MP for Tonbridge is a former security minister and as an officer in military intelligence and as military assistant to the then Chief of the General Staff, general David Richards, he went through the DV process.
“Our government, rightly, spends millions on vetting. It’s not perfect but it’s the only rational response to the very real threat of espionage, corruption and blackmail,” he said on X.
“It’s intrusive and not pleasant, and it takes months; but it’s necessary. Holding a clearance is limiting but losing one is career-ending, as it should be.
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“I’ve been vetted and responsible for vetting as a soldier and minister. I’ve never heard of anyone who failed vetting getting a senior position, or any position of sensitivity.
Peter Mandelson, speaks during a welcome reception for British Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, at the ambassador’s residence on February 26, 2025 (AFP/Getty)
“Given the essential oversight of the intelligence sharing and commercial relationship between the US and UK, it’s hard to think of a more sensitive position.”
He went on to explain that the kind of waiver that was given Lord Mandelson would, usually, have involved a ministerial sign off.
They are necessarily issued when there is an urgent need to include an unvetted agent into a secret process or include someone in the secret realm when his clearance was in the pipeline.
“It is extraordinary to suggest that our ambassador to the US not only held no ministerial waiver for the temporary absence of his vetting clearance but, worse, had actually been vetted and found to be personally a risk to the security of the UK and appointed anyway,” Tughendat said.
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