British PM Starmer Faces Crucial Vote in the House of Commons Tomorrow To Decide If He Will Face Ethics Investigation Over Jeffrey Epstein-Peter Mandelson Crisis | The Gateway Pundit | by Paul Serran


British PM Starmer Faces Crucial Vote in the House of Commons Tomorrow To Decide If He Will Face Ethics Investigation Over Jeffrey Epstein-Peter Mandelson Crisis

A politician passionately addresses the House of Commons, engaging with fellow members during a parliamentary session.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer will fight for his political life in Commons vote – Wiki Commons

As usual, it’s not the crime, it’s the cover-up that finally nails the guilty.

What seemed impossible may be about to happen: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer faces tomorrow (28) a life-or-death vote that will decide his political future (or lack of).

Starmer is desperately pleading with Labour MPs to back him in a Commons vote on the Peter Mandelson vetting scandal as he scrambled to save his premiership.

The Telegraph reported:

“MPs will vote on Tuesday on whether the Prime Minister should face an ethics investigation into his handling of the fiasco by the privileges committee, the same body that forced Boris Johnson’s resignation.

Before the crunch vote, Sir Keir held a meeting with Labour MPs on Monday evening in an attempt to convince wavering supporters that they should back him.

No 10 has issued a three-line whip ordering backbenchers to rally behind their Prime Minister, to prevent him from being referred to the committee over claims he misled MPs, or face suspension from the party.”

“The Prime Minister told Labour MPs: ‘This is a political stunt by our opponents who want to bring us down, obscure our message, stop us getting on with our work. And the timing tells you everything, nine days before local elections. Tomorrow is pure politics and we need to stand together against it’.”

BBC reported:

“The BBC has been told that cabinet ministers have been ringing round Labour MPs to convince them to back the prime minister and vote against referring the matter to the Privileges Committee.

The committee can look into cases of MPs breaking parliamentary rules and in 2023 it ruled that the former Prime Minister Boris Johnson had misled MPs about parties in Downing Street during Covid.

The Ministerial Code states that ministers who knowingly mislead Parliament are expected to resign, while any inadvertent error should be corrected ‘at the earliest opportunity’.

At the start of parliamentary business on Monday, Sir Lindsay said ‘numerous’ MPs, including the Conservative leader, had asked him to allow a vote on holding an inquiry.”

Read more:

Failing British PM Starmer Attacks Trump and Putin, Tries to Avoid Blame for His Own Energy Fiasco – PLUS: Scandal Erupts as It’s Revealed He Was ON A HOLIDAY as Iran War Escalated

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Paul Serran is a Brazilian writer and musician, a contributor to The Gateway Pundit since 2023. Follow him on X | Truth Social

You can email Paul Serran here, and read more of Paul Serran's articles here.

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