The UK is shaking. Can a government survive when one of its most trusted aides resigns over a scandal tied to Jeffrey Epstein? The question is urgent as British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, steps down, taking responsibility for advising the appointment of Peter Mandelson as U.S. ambassador despite Mandelson’s links to Epstein. Epstein files bring down Starmer’s right-hand man, and the fallout is loud and angry.
Starmer Faces His Biggest Test
McSweeney’s resignation hits Starmer at a fragile time. Less than two years into power, and with huge public dissatisfaction, Starmer now faces questions about his judgment and leadership. The files show Mandelson’s close ties to Epstein and even suggest he leaked government documents to the convicted sex offender. This is not a small mistake; it is a political earthquake.

Labour insiders admit the decision to send Mandelson to Washington was reckless. Some say the resignation is too late, buying Starmer time, but not trust. Epstein files bring down Starmer’s right-hand man, and in doing so, they cast doubt on Starmer himself.
The Human Cost of Bad Decisions
The public sees this as more than politics. Confidence in leaders is falling. McSweeney admitted publicly that advising Starmer to appoint Mandelson was wrong, saying it damaged the party, the country, and trust in politics. Ordinary citizens following this scandal feel betrayed. Labour MPs, voters, and opposition politicians are all pointing fingers.
The Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, called the resignation overdue. Nigel Farage suggested Starmer’s own time may be up. It is clear that the Epstein files brought down Starmer’s right-hand man, but they also shook the very foundation of the Prime Minister’s credibility.
Lessons Starmer Must Learn
Starmer has defended McSweeney, but the public is not convinced. Choosing aides is part of leadership, and the scandal shows why vetting and judgment matter. The Epstein files are not just old stories; they are a reminder that connections to the wrong people can destroy careers and reputations.
Starmer faces a choice: take responsibility fully or watch the opposition gain momentum. Epstein files bring down Starmer’s right-hand man, yes, but they also warn that one wrong move can topple an entire government.
Fallout Is Just Starting
The resignation is only the beginning. British politics is messy, and trust is fragile. Ordinary people watching this shake their heads and ask, “How could they not see this coming?” For Starmer, the lesson is brutal and public. The repercussions will echo for months, maybe years, as the public demands accountability and transparency from those at the top.
















