The Peter Mandelson scandal reveals a fundamental failure of political imagination within the government. It appears that Downing Street was simply unable to foresee the massive and inevitable backlash that would accompany any new revelation about their chosen ambassador’s ties to Jeffrey Epstein.
The decision to appoint him was based on a narrow, technical assessment of risk versus reward. What was missing was a broader, more empathetic understanding of the public mood. In an era of heightened sensitivity to issues of abuse and elite privilege, appointing a friend of Epstein to a top job was always going to be inflammatory.
The government failed to imagine how such an appointment would feel to the victims of Epstein. It failed to imagine the righteous anger it would provoke, as articulated by the Giuffre family. And it failed to imagine how politically potent the issue would be for the opposition. This was not just a failure of vetting, but a failure of empathy.
This lack of imagination led to the government being blindsided by a crisis it should have seen coming a mile away. The claim that the “situation changed” with the new emails is an admission that they had not considered the possibility of such a development, a remarkable oversight for a government operating in the modern media environment.
