Friday, 6 February 2026

Strongly In The Public Interest


Late on Friday evening, this notice was circulated from representatives of Peter Mandelson, via press regulator IPSO and the Press Association newswire, to all media across the UK.

In it, Mandelson uses clauses of the Editor's Code most typically associated with grieving families or those suffering harassment from the press to urge journalists to stop scrutinising his links to the most world's most notorious paedophile.

We believe it is strongly in the public interest to publish this memo. This is it in full.

CONFIDENTIAL – STRICTLY NOT FOR PUBLICATION: Ipso has asked us to circulate the following advisory:

Ipso has today been contacted by a representative acting on behalf of Peter Mandelson.

Mr Mandelson’s representatives state that he does not wish to speak to the media at this time. He requests that the press do not take photos or film, approach, or contact him via phone, email, or in-person. His representatives ask that any requests for his comment are directed to [REDACTED]

We are happy to make editors aware of his request. We note the terms of Clause 2 (Privacy) and 3 (Harassment) of the Editors’ Code, and in particular that Clause 3 states that journalists must not persist in questioning, telephoning, pursuing or photographing individuals once asked to desist, unless justified in the public interest.

Please do not hesitate to contact me to discuss any Code issues on [REDACTED] or out of hours on [REDACTED].

[IPSO official]

A Stern Warning


David Stern sits directly to the left of Queen Elizabeth at an event at St James's Palace in 2016. Two places to the right of the queen is the financier Sir Evelyn de Rothschild (Screengrab/ X)

It’s long been an open secret that Prince Andrew, now stripped of his royal title, was a member of Jeffrey Epstein’s inner circle.

But the Epstein files reveal that another figure should be understood as the paedophile’s unofficial ambassador to the British royal family.

David Stern, a 48-year-old German-born investor who now lives in the United Arab Emirates, is mentioned thousands of times in the Epstein files.

Epstein introduced David Stern to Andrew. Stern became a trusted friend to the royal family. So trusted that in 2016 he was made a director of the St George’s House trust.

Nestled in Windsor Castle, St George’s House was founded in 1966 by the late Duke of Edinburgh as a private space “where people of influence from right across society could come together to debate and discuss issues of national and international importance”.

This institution is part of the College of St George, alongside St George’s Chapel, where 10 British monarchs are buried.

It is difficult to go deeper into the traditional British establishment.

Stern was so trusted that he was placed next to the late Queen Elizabeth at an event at St James’s Palace in 2016.

But at the same time Stern was so close to Epstein that the convicted sex offender arranged accommodation for him in New York as late as 2018 - the year before Epstein would be found dead in a New York City prison cell.

Middle East Eye has unearthed extraordinary details of Stern’s relationship with the notorious paedophile in files recently released by the US Department of Justice.

Stern sent Epstein sexually explicit messages, including a photo of a naked woman, and invited a girlfriend of the financier to a Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Buckingham Palace.

Stern accompanied Andrew abroad. He reported on the then-royal’s doings to Epstein. He pitched business deals to the financier.

It was only after Epstein’s suspicious death and Andrew’s disastrous BBC Newsnight interview about his relationship with the paedophile in 2019 that Stern resigned as a director of Andrew’s project Pitch@Palace, a role he had been given in 2016.

He would remain on the board of St George’s House until 2022, three years after Epstein’s death.

Sexually explicit messages

As an indication of how close Stern’s relationship with Epstein was, in 2014 he wished Epstein a happy birthday with the message: “Champagne for you (even though you don’t drink it).”

This was accompanied by a photograph of champagne being poured over the apparently naked body of a young woman, whose face is not identified.

“PA [Prince Andrew] sends his birthday wishes and love,” Stern added later that day.

He sent lewd memes and jokes to Epstein, who had pleaded guilty in 2008 to soliciting prostitution sex from underage girls.

On 18 May 2012 Epstein asked Stern when “the lady”, whose name is unknown, was set to arrive in Paris on Friday night.

Stern replied: “Last one on Friday: leaving London 20:01 arriving Paris 23:17.” 

He sent a photo, not accessible in the released files, and asked Epstein: “is assume that’s her?”

Epstein responded: “I would like her to go both way with you.”

Stern said: “Let me see how it can be done. Return train on Saturday at 13:13 ok?”

Epstein replied: “that would be helpful”.

David Stern poses for a photograph with then-Prince Andrew and his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson which was sent to Jeffrey Epstein in 2014 (Epstein files)

On another occasion, on 21 May 2014, Stern emailed Epstein saying: “I will arrive Saturday (31st) morning in NYC.

“Will see you latest 4pm on Sunday, unless you want me to come over before for any reason, orgies, etc.”

In April 2016, Stern invited a girlfriend of Epstein, Karyna Shuliak, to the Changing of the Guard ceremony outside Buckingham Palace, which sees soldiers on duty at the royal residence hand over to a new group of soldiers.

After his death it emerged that Epstein promised Belarus-raised Shuliak four of his homes and a cash bequest of $50m.

In an email Stern told Kuliak, then aged 26, that he would take her somewhere where they needed to bring “picture I.D”. He said: “The dress code is formal so no jeans or sneakers etc (I know it's annoying but it's very strict).”

Shuliak said she was “looking forward” to the event.

Trips to China

Stern’s relationship with Epstein continued until at least 2018, the messages suggest.

In July 2018 email correspondence reveals that Epstein said he would ask former Trump advisor Steve Bannon if he had time to have tea with Stern in London. And in September, just months before his arrest, Epstein arranged an apartment for Stern to stay in on a trip to New York.

Stern’s association with Andrew began when he was British trade envoy.

In February 2010 Andrew’s wife Sarah Ferguson, then the Duchess of York, said in an email to an unknown recipient that Epstein had introduced her to Stern and that Stern had come to the Royal Lodge in Windsor for dinner.

In 2002 Stern founded Asia Gateway Limited, a China-focused advisory with offices in Beijing and London. Stern would repeatedly pitch China-related deals to Epstein.

On 23 March 2011 Stern emailed Epstein asking him: “Do you want to send the idea (if you like it) of investing in Stansted Airport to the Chinese guy that came to see you (Beijing Capital airport)? Good way to test him. Could be an interesting deal.”

In September that year Stern told Epstein that most meetings Andrew had planned in China and Kuala Lumpur “are organised by me except mayors and governors and nothing in KL”.

He explained that “I stay in the background/hidden, just make the arrangements.”

On 21 October 2011 ahead of a trip by Andrew to China, Stern emailed Epstein telling him that Andrew was “chartering his own plane. He wants to take me with him.

“My name will be on the flight-records etc. I feel it is safer to fly separately.” He asked whether Epstein agreed and the financier replied that it was “ok,, to fly with him”.

The visit, which took place shortly after Andrew stepped down as trade envoy in July that year following scrutiny over his friendship with Epstein, was widely publicised. Andrew attended the opening ceremony of a factory and opened a British school in Shanghai.

On 21 November 2011 Stern asked Epstein: “For the African investment vehicle we can be the bridge between the Chinese and African side: both get what they want with maximum protection/distance (ie no direct Chinese involvement) through us as intermediary. It can be a deal machine once Chinese capital gets involved. It would fit in perfectly with the other plan of managing Chinese wealth.”

In 2012 Stern even tried to help Epstein get a visa to travel to China, but the financier was denied a tourist visa - because of his criminal record, an assistant suggested in an email to Stern.

Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem and the Dukes hotel

The business relationship between the two men was wide-ranging.

In 2010 Stern encouraged Epstein to buy the luxury Dukes hotel in London, a ten-minute walk from Buckingham Palace.

The hotel was owned by Emirati businessman Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, currently chairman and CEO of DP World, the Dubai-owned trade and logistics company which controls ports all over the world.

Sulayem has appeared elsewhere in the Epstein files. In one email exchange, he wrote to share his views on the Quran with Epstein before noting that he is “off the sample a fresh 100% female Russian” on his yacht. MEE has contacted DP World for comment.

Epstein asked financial advisers to value the hotel and work out the cost of refurbishing it. Stern even suggested to Epstein that he install a “playroom” in the hotel. In the end no deal was made.

Email correspondence shows that Epstein introduced Stern to Peter Mandelson, the former Labour minister who was this week stripped of his peerage over new revelations about his close relationship with Epstein.

In April 2011 Epstein asked Stern to call Mandelson, who agreed to speak to him - although the reason for the call and what was said in it are unclear.

Sarah Ferguson’s financial issues

Stern often kept Epstein informed on goings-on in royal circles.

On 11 September 2009 Stern reported to Epstein that Ferguson, Andrew’s ex-wife, wanted him to accompany her to meet Vladimir Zemtsov, a Russian-born billionaire “willing to evaluate” paying off Ferguson’s heavy debts.

That same year Epstein reportedly hired a private investigator to look into Ferguson’s activities.

In September 2010 Stern told Epstein that Andrew “asked me to see a guy who has access to Nigeria oil and when selling it to China (or somebody else) F [Ferguson] can make around $6m.” Stern added that the idea “seems very fishy”.

In March the following year a political scandal erupted when Ferguson admitted she had allowed Epstein to pay off £15,000 of her debts.

“I personally, on behalf of myself, deeply regret that Jeffrey Epstein became involved in any way with me,” she said.

“I abhor paedophilia and any sexual abuse of children and know that this was a gigantic error of judgment on my behalf.”

Stern sent Epstein a Telegraph article reporting on Ferguson’s admission and said: “Is she going crazy ??? When can I call you ?”

Later that day he emailed Epstein again asking: “Any actions I should take ? How should we proceed ?”

But two days later, on 9 March, Stern reported to Epstein: “Rest of the day has become more quiet and restrained. Theme seems to be now: PA [Andrew] under scrutiny for dealing with Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan (but government approved!), he has full support of his Mum [Queen Elizabeth], only dealing with you [Epstein] was “unwise”.”

Stern added: “The dealings to you are now predominately related to F. [Ferguson] and her financial trouble, always quoting her interview and her “lack of judgment” and she will never deal with you again etc.”

Fresh crisis for the royal family

Andrew has long insisted he had cut ties with Epstein after his imprisonment. But that claim was exploded this week. At times Stern acted as an intermediary between the paedophile and the then-prince, such as when he conveyed Andrew’s birthday wishes to Epstein in 2014.

During these years Stern was becoming increasingly embedded in royal circles. This was how he ended up sitting directly to the left of the late Queen Elizabeth in 2016 at St James’s Palace, as a director of Andrew’s Pitch@the Palace project.

Two places to the right of the queen is the late financier Sir Evelyn de Rothschild. In 2015 Stern had asked Epstein if Rothschild wanted to sponsor Pitch@Palace. “It’s quite cool and draws a good crowd,” he said.

This latest tranche of released Epstein files has already triggered a fresh crisis for the royal family this week.

Andrew, who was stripped of his royal title by his brother King Charles last year and is now known as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, has been forced to move out of his home in the Royal Lodge early.

He is reportedly struggling to find staff willing to serve him in his new home.

These new revelations suggest that the notorious financier’s entanglements within the British establishment may have been deeper and more complex than previously assumed.

MEE has contacted Stern for comment.

More photographs of Queen Elizabeth with Stern are still on the King’s own website, here.

People With A Moral Core

Even though it had been heavily edited by Elbit, the security guards’ bodycam footage played in court still showed them wielding whips and sledgehammers against the protestors, in breach of the Prevention of Crime Act 1953. The Epstein British State and the rest of the Epstein Israel Lobby clearly expected 12 members of the general public to regard that as perfectly reasonable and even commendable. Talk about an unassimilable parallel society. Craig Murray writes:

As the trial finished at Woolwich Crown Court of the six Palestine Action activists who entered the Filton factory to destroy Israeli killer drones, Starmer, Cooper, Lammy and Mahmood are left bereft of a single guilty verdict in the case on which they relied heavily to label Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation.

I could not, on pain of imprisonment, tell you this during the trial. One item produced by the prosecution as evidence was the notebook of Charlotte Head, on which she had written details from her training session with Palestine Action and of the proposed direct action against Elbit’s drone factory.

The first ten pages of her notes were about the Israeli weapons company Elbit, their footprint in the UK, their corporate structure and the weapons they manufacture, and the evidence of the use of their weaponry in the genocide in Gaza.

The jury were shown the notebook but were specifically not allowed to see the first ten pages. Throughout the trial anything that referred to the crimes of Elbit, their role in the mass killing and mutilation of women and children, and their cosy relationship with the British government, was excluded from the jury. The judge continually stopped the defence lawyers from asking or saying anything about who Elbit are or why their property was being attacked.

The defendants were not permitted therefore to explain to the jury why they did what they did – which you might have believed was a pretty fundamental right. The jury were additionally, in effect, instructed by Judge Johnson to convict on the least serious charge, that of criminal damage.

But despite the state taking every possible precaution to ensure that the state got its convictions in this show trial, the jury refused to find that trying to stop Genocide is a crime.

This trial was fundamental to the government’s argument that Palestine Action is a terrorist organisation. And the key to that was the accusation that Palestine Action from the start intended harm to people, not just to property. That is why these defendants were all charged with “aggravated burglary”.

Aggravated burglary is an extremely serious charge, carrying a potential life sentence. It is the offence of breaking into a property with the intent to use a weapon. On aggravated burglary, all six defendants were found resoundingly Not Guilty.

So the attempt to portray Palestine Action as an organisation involved in violence against persons has fallen flat on its face. Because the jury could see it was stupid and obviously untrue.

When it comes to events after the activists were attacked by security guards, three of the six were found not guilty of the charge of “violent disorder”. On three others the jury could not reach a verdict.

Most interesting of all perhaps was the charge of criminal damage to Elbit’s machinery and instruments of genocide. Here Judge Johnson to all intents and purposes had instructed the jury to convict. Yet enough of the jury could not accept that stopping genocide is a crime.

The final question was the charge against Samuel Corner of Grievous Bodily Harm with Intent. This was the famous incident where the security guards attacked the defendants with weapons and there was a melee as they defended themselves.

It is worth stating that the tabloid stories and right-wing meme of “a policewoman’s spine was fractured” was always utter nonsense. As the defence closing speech stated:

The prosecution have said it was a fracture to the spine, a deliberate choice of words which although technically accurate, conjure up a break, a snapping of the spinal vertebrae. Maybe that’s what the jury had in mind until they saw the CT scan – it was actually an injury that wasn’t obvious. The doctors looking at the first X-rays didn’t identify any bone damage, nor in an MRI later.

The injury didn’t require surgery and Sergeant Evans was advised to take painkillers and do physiotherapy. The agreed facts state from medical evidence that you’d expect such a fracture to heal in six to twelve weeks, with full healing in three to six months, and no long-term consequences.

The unfortunate policewoman suffered no damage at all to her spinal cord. She had a possible hairline fracture to the wing of one vertebra. That there was any fracture at all was never definitive from the X-rays and MRIs. Whether it reached the bar of grievous bodily harm was disputed; how it was caused was disputed; and whether there was any intent to harm was disputed. The refusal of the jury to convict was completely consistent with the evidence heard in court.

This has driven right-wingers into a frenzy with completely false claims about the extent of the injury, and continued reference to a highly edited brief video clip.

That video clip is extremely important because it represents the height of the state’s attempt to use this incident to demonise Palestine Action. The police were permitted, during the course of the trial, to release a single and highly edited clip of video said to represent the injury of Sergeant Evans by a sledgehammer. A great deal of other video evidence was not released. This resulted in a massive media frenzy.

Even before this, Yvette Cooper and Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Mark Rowley had caused massive prejudice by stating that a policewoman had been attacked with a sledgehammer.

None of these deliberate attempts to affect the trial was censured by the judge nor resulted in any proceedings for contempt of court. Yet we were strictly told we absolutely could not mention that the judge was withholding the evidence about Elbit from the jury, as that would prejudice the trial and we would face contempt of court proceedings.

On Sergeant Evans, she has become a cause célèbre for the right, but I should say there is no evidence she is herself whipping this up. Her behaviour on the night was admirable. She was not herself involved in the excessive use of force – and, despite her own painful back, tended to others after the event quietened.

In my view, this prosecution was doomed by the overcharging and exaggeration used by the government to demonise Palestine Action. The “aggravated burglary” charge was ludicrous. To attempt to claim that the activists entered the factory with the intent of using weapons against people, went so far against the evidence it was bound to fail.

The massive over-exaggeration of the extent of Sergeant Evans’s injury has successfully whipped up right-wing hysteria, but did not really meet the threshold of grievous bodily harm, and the decision to add intent to that charge was again not backed by evidence.

On criminal damage, the jury plainly refused to accept the destruction of weapons of genocide was a crime. For that, I salute them. For the rest, they simply applied robust common sense to the evidence before them.

The “policewoman attacked with a sledgehammer” nonsense of course featured heavily in the English judicial review of the proscription of Palestine Action. In the Scottish judicial review, they cannot really use this – not without a caveat that a jury did not agree with them.

The Filton result is great news for the Scottish judicial review. We have to submit all the paperwork for that, in just seven working days. I hate to say this, but we are now desperately short of funds to continue this action. I cannot keep asking the same supporters to give more, but if you know people who can afford it and will contribute please activate them.


Six Palestine Action activists who broke into an Israeli arms factory in the UK have been acquitted or not convicted of all charges against them.

Campaigners told The Electronic Intifada on Wednesday that the result was a “monumental” and “total” victory.

After eight days of deliberation in January and February, the jury either acquitted or refused to convict Charlotte Head, Samuel Corner, Leona Kamio, Fatema Zainab Rajwani, Zoe Rogers and Jordan Devlin of all charges.

Five out of the six were released on bail Wednesday evening.

All six were found not guilty of aggravated burglary, the most serious charge which could have led to life sentences. The six activists were arrested on site in August 2024 and held on remand for 17 months.

They were the first of a total of 24 defendants to face trials relating to the invasion and smashing of a factory in Filton, near Bristol in the west of England, owned by a subsidiary of Elbit Systems, Israel’s largest weapons manufacturer.

The group of 24 includes some of the prisoners who recently went on a hunger strike.

Once inside, the group destroyed Israeli quadcopter drones, which have been used frequently to massacre Palestinians in Gaza.

During the trial, acquitted defendant Fatema Zainab Rajwani (a third-year film student at the time of the action) was open that, “I damaged drones which is what I went in to do.” She commented on video footage shown to the court, saying, “That is me dismantling a quadcopter drone with a crowbar,” and explaining that the group wanted to “document the presence of quadcopters and [Elbit’s] crimes.”

Fourteen other defendants were rounded up by Britain’s feared Counter Terrorism Police, in a series of violent pre-dawn raids in November 2024 and July last year.

A Palestine Action source told The Electronic Intifada on Wednesday that the remaining Filton 24 prisoners will now appeal to be released on bail.

Such prisoners can usually be held on remand before trial for up to six months. But the politicization and fallacious government “terrorism” campaign against the group – in connivance with Israel – meant that the campaigners have been held on remand for as long as 17 months.

Not guilty

In addition to beating the most serious charge, the jury acquitted Fatema Zainab Rajwani, Zoe Rogers and Jordan Devlin of violent disorder. It refused to convict Charlotte Head, Samuel Corner and Leona Kamio of the same charge.

Samuel Corner was also not convicted of “grievous bodily harm with intent” for allegedly striking a police officer.

Crucially, the jury refused to convict any of the defendants of criminal damage.

Yet five of the group had admitted in court to destroying Israeli weapons and equipment belonging to Elbit at the factory.

That the jury could not reach a majority verdict on some of the lesser charges means in theory that there could be retrials in some cases – though that is not expected to have a realistic chance of success.

That is why the sixth defendant, Samuel Corner, was not immediately bailed on Wednesday. Government prosecutors asked the court for more time to decide if they wanted to pursue a retrial in relation to the grievous bodily harm charge.

The Palestine Action source also said that certain issues relating to matters under reporting restrictions imposed by the judge in this trial meant that the verdict was the best possible outcome for the group.

The source said that the verdict represented a “total victory” for the six Palestine Action campaigners.

Most of the remaining “Filton 24” group have been held on draconian remand for months – for more than a year in some cases.

But one, Sean Middlebrough, escaped during a short-term release in November last year. In an exclusive statement, he told The Electronic Intifada that he was not on the run, and was instead “refusing to be held as a prisoner of war of Israel in a British prison.”

Government ministers such as former Home Secretary Yvette Cooper attempted to portray the Filton activists as violent criminals who assaulted a police officer. The British press for the most part obediently parroted such claims and insinuations. But during this “Filton 6” trial, body-cam footage released to the jury – some of which can be viewed in the video above – showed the exact opposite: Elbit security guards apparently assaulting the activists with sledgehammers.

In a statement released on Wednesday the Filton 24 Defence Committee said the result was a “monumental victory.”

The committee detailed how the trial unfolded.

According to the committee, the verdicts demonstrated that “the jury did not accept the prosecution case that the defendants entered the Elbit weapons factory with the intention of using the items they carried as weapons.”

They said that instead the “jury agreed with the defense argument, that the defendants’ sole intention was to use the items, including sledgehammers, as tools to disarm Israeli weapons … The jury understood that it is not those who destroy Israeli weapons which are guilty, rather the guilty party is the one that deploys such weapons to commit genocide in Gaza.”

The trial also revealed that footage went missing from a number of Elbit’s internal CCTV cameras covering key angles, the committee said. The security guards’ body-worn videos had also been repeatedly turned off and on, as well as edited by Elbit.

Twenty-first century suffragettes 

Defense lawyer Rajiv Menon compared the six to the suffragettes – women who demanded the right to vote. In the early 20th century, the suffragettes were routinely denounced as “terrorists and extremists,” although “the reality of course is very different,” Menon said.

The lawyer also said that Judge Jeremy Johnson tried to exclude evidence on Elbit Systems, and interrupted when counsel for the defense asked questions about the Israeli weapons manufacturer.

Menon said that the judge “has restricted what the defendants have been allowed to tell you … what they knew about Elbit’s role in the Israeli attack on Gaza. The consequence of that is that you do not know everything that the defendants knew about Elbit before” they took action against the factory.

The lawyer told the jury that Elbit is a “massive weapons company that has played a critical role in the killing of tens of thousands of Palestinians.”

At the end of the evidence, the judge told the jury that the “situation in the Middle East” and Elbit’s operations are “not relevant” to the case and directed the jury to “follow the legal directions I’ve given you and not anything else.”

The judge also issued a series of reporting restrictions on the case. As a result, I am still prevented from reporting certain details here.

Nonetheless, because the case was heard in open court, I am able to report the following.

During the trial, a juror asked whether they were allowed to acquit because the defendants genuinely believed that they were destroying weapons to prevent their use in genocide.

The judge’s response was “no.”

Trials of the remaining Filton 24 prisoners are still due to happen at some point in the future.

Blow to UK and Israel

Clare Rogers, the mother of defendant Zoe Rogers and a relentless campaigner in her own right said in the committee’s statement that “these are six young people of conscience … They had tried everything else – marches, petitions, writing to MPs, encampments … They felt they had no option but to take action themselves, to try to save as many lives as they could.” 

The verdicts are a severe blow to the UK government’s attempt to smear Palestine campaigners as violent criminals and “terrorists.” 

In a controversial move last July the home secretary banned Palestine Action as a “terrorist” group, marking the first time ever a non-violent protest group had been outlawed under Britain’s draconian Terrorism Act of 2000. 

Activist lisa minerva luxx, from the Filton 24 Defence Committee, criticized the government for prejudicing the trial: “This was a trial by media. Yvette Cooper and [Prime Minister] Keir Starmer took evidence in this case out of context and broadcast it on televisions and tabloids across the country in order to justify proscribing Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation.” With the result of a legal challenge to that ban expected any week now, the verdict also represents a serious blow to the credibility of that proscription.

This is despite the government – and even the legal system – going to the greatest lengths to try and stitch up this case.

There are also serious implications for the continuing right to trial by jury in the UK. The fact that a jury of their peers acquitted or refused to convict the first six of the Filton 24 shows the importance and the democratic potential of jury trials.

It is exactly for those reasons that the UK government is seeking to abolish, or seriously erode, the right to trial by jury in the UK. In large part, these so-called “reforms” seem to be targeted precisely at supporting Israel and preventing juries from acquitting according to their conscience.


Jurors bravely set aside social conditioning, the natural instinct we all share to defer to authority, and expectations fomented by establishment media. Instead they considered the actual evidence.

Even before the trial began, the British government had done its utmost to prejudice the proceedings against six Palestine Action activists.

It declared that they belonged to a terrorist organisation and that they were engaged in a terrorist enterprise in breaking into an Israeli weapons factory in Filton, Bristol – one, British officials avoided mentioning, that makes drones used to kill children in Gaza.

In the months before the trial, the home secretary of the time, Yvette Cooper, explicitly said her decision to proscribe Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation was, in part, based on the events that had unfolded at the Filton factory. We were told the logic behind her decision – the first time a non-violent direct-action group has been proscribed in British history – would become clear through the trial.

In the midst of the proceedings, the police released a highly edited – and extremely prejudicial – video clip to present the defendants as bent on violence against the weapons factory’s security guards and police officers who later attended the scene.

Meanwhile, the judge overseeing the trial, Mr Justice Johnson, refused the admission of any testimony relating to the crimes committed by Elbit Systems. He also directed the jury to convict the Filton Six on the charge of criminal damage.

The British establishment wanted one outcome and one outcome only – and it did everything in its power to make sure it got its way.

Yet after eight days of clearly intense deliberation, the jury refused to convict the Filton Six of any of the charges against them.

They were all acquitted of the most serious charge, aggravated burglary, that could have seen them locked up for life. Three were acquitted of violent disorder, while the jury was unable to reach a decision on the other three. The jury was similarly split over the criminal damage charge, despite the extreme pressure put on them to convict by the judge.

Given the highly inflamed and politicised climate surrounding the trial, that decision required extraordinary bravery – a courage some of the jurors presumably found in the inspiring speech delivered by one of the defence barristers, Rajiv Menon. He reminded them of the 350-year-old right established in British law for juries to ignore judicial interference of the kind exercised by Mr Justice Johnson.

You can read part of that astonishing speech in the link here.

On possibly the most significant charge from the government’s point of view – of grievous bodily harm levelled against one defendant, Samuel Corner – the jury was again split. This related to a tussle with one of the sledgehammers that was being used to destroy the Israeli killer-drones. The incident led to a female police officer’s back being injured. More on that injury later.

The highly edited videos of the struggle released by the prosecution – a move that should have been held as contempt of court in a proper trial – were designed to prove the government’s case that Palestine Action is a violent organisation deserving of proscription.

(It seems it needs clarifying here for some observers that violence, in law, refers to attacks on people, not property. If Palestine Action only damages property – weapons being used to kill civilians in Gaza – that makes it a non-violent organisation and one that should never have been proscribed.)

It is important to set out why the jurors reached the decisions they did, given the widespread denunciations that have greeted their findings – not least from former home secretary Suella Braverman, now with Reform, and the current Conservative shadow home secretary, Chris Philp.

It is important to understand why the bar for conviction was never likely to be reached – and why the jury were right in refusing to convict.

The aggravated burglary charge required proving that the six defendants harboured an intention, as they broke into the factory, to use the sledgehammers they had brought with them not only to destroy the killer-drones but additionally to hurt the security guards. The prosecution was unable to provide such evidence because it did not exist. The jury, therefore, had no choice but to acquit.

In fact, it was incredible overreach to imagine that such a charge would ever stick. It was brought for one reason only: because it was critical to building the government’s case that Palestine Action is a terrorist organisation. In other words, it was an entirely politicised charge. The jury saw right through the legal chicanery.

The government’s fallback position was the violent disorder charge, which still suggested violent intent from the activists. The problem once again, however, was that the charge clearly did not fit the events the jury watched for themselves from the much longer video footage.

Violent disorder is a charge usually associated with football hooligans or groups of people who start pub brawls. It is meant to prosecute those who conspire to cause random acts violence that innocent bystanders believe threaten their safety. However, the longer video footage – or rather the bits that Elbit Systems had not withheld or destroyed – showed that it was actually the security guards who initiated much of the violence.

In violent disorder, there is a defence: of self-defence. In three of the cases, the jury was sure that the defendants had been protecting themselves or their fellow activists from violence being directed at them from the security guards. That is why they acquitted. The video evidence, incomplete as it was, was presumably more ambiguous in the case of the other three, which is why the jury could not reach agreement.

On the least significant charge, criminal damage, the judge had made clear he expected a conviction – and he tried to rig the trial to get that conviction by stripping the defendants of the only defence that was available, of “lawful excuse”. The defendants’ argument was that, yes, they had caused criminal damage but it was justified in stopping a far graver crime, that of genocide.

Despite the huge pressure on them to submit to the judge’s demand, enough of the jury clearly thought that, in this case, criminal damage – in the form of smashing up killer drones – was a reasonable action. It is quite extraordinary that the hill politicians like Braverman and Philp, and sections of the British public, want to die on is defending Israel’s right to make killer-drones on British soil. Thank God, we had people with a moral core, not these ghouls, on the jury.

On the single charge of grievous bodily harm against Corner, the jury could again not reach a decision. He is still on remand, with the danger he will be retried on this charge and possibly others. It is, therefore, difficult to say much beyond the fact that, given the clamour to convict him from politicians, the media and Israel worshippers, there must have been pretty clear extenuating circumstances that led some of the jurors to believe a conviction would be unreasonable.

Unlike much of the public, who have been inflamed by the official story that a “police woman’s back was broken”, the jury heard the actual medical diagnosis. In his closing speech, Corner’s defence barrister set out the facts: 

The doctors looking at the first X-rays didn’t identify any bone damage, nor in an MRI later. The injury didn’t require surgery and Sergeant Evans was advised to take painkillers and do physiotherapy. The agreed facts state from medical evidence that you’d expect such a fracture to heal in six to twelve weeks, with full healing in three to six months, and no long-term consequences.

Keir Starmer’s government – a government actively complicit in Israel’s genocide – has every incentive to keep the Palestine Action trials going. It much prefers a public conversation about whether opponents of genocide are violent criminals and terrorists than one about whether British government ministers should be in the dock at the Hague for complicity in crimes against humanity.

It is likely the government will seek at least some retrials in this case and try to secure convictions against other Palestine Action activists whose trials are still pending. It will hope that, sooner or later, it gets the victory it needs to retrospectively justify its proscription and silencing of Palestine Action.

From the government’s point of view, it is a win-win. If it can get a compliant enough jury to win one of these trials, it will say it was right all along to declare Palestine Action a terrorist organisation. If it doesn’t secure any convictions, it will argue that these failed trials prove that juries need abolishing – an agenda it is already pursuing precisely to stop juries acquitting people the government wants convicted for political reasons.

Sadly, too many onlookers are falling for this legal charade, denouncing the jury’s decision in the Filton Six trial as if they know more about what happened at the weapons factory that night than the jurors who sat through 10 weeks of evidence and spent eight days deliberating on that evidence.

That is a strange, unhealthy kind of self-regard – and too many people are currently engaged in it.

A final point. Yes, juries can make mistakes. But that is highly unlikely to have been a problem in this trial.

Miscarriages of justice typically occur when the jury’s own socially conditioned biases, bolstered by judicial and political pressures, take priority over the evidence, or when the evidence is rigged to secure a conviction.

They happen in trials like the Birmingham Six and the Guildford Four in the 1970s, when a series of men were wrongly jailed for IRA-related bombings in UK cities simply because they were Irish. In these cases, the juries assumed that the police had not fabricated evidence and had not coerced confessions through torture. They were wrong. The legal system was more interested in securing a conviction than justice.

The biases we hold as self-evident truths are always socially constructed – and the people who get to construct them are the political and media establishments that dominate the flow of information we receive from cradle to grave.

Those same political and media establishments exert most pressure when they see their own class interests under threat.

In short, the pressures on the jury in this case were in one direction only: to convict the Filton Six.

Transcripts show the judge – the trial’s highest authority figure – barely hiding his own biases in favour of conviction.

In refusing to convict, the jury had to set aside its social conditioning, the natural instinct we all share to defer to authority, and the wider social expectations fomented by the establishment media.

The route of least resistance – the one most people take – would have been to have found all, or at least some, of the Filton Six guilty – not least Corner, who had been turned into a hate figure by the media. It is a sign of how strongly the evidence pointed in a different direction that the jury still refused to do as it was told.

And the following comment was left anonymously on yesterday’s post about this case:

Samuel Corner has been denied bail despite receiving no convictions in the first trial relating to the dismantling of weapons at Elbit Systems’ Bristol weapons factory. The other five defendants in the case have had bail granted following their acquittals on aggravated burglary. Samuel was acquitted of aggravated burglary along with all defendants. He wasn’t convicted on any charge including the charge of GBH against a police officer. Powerful testimony was given in court over the circumstances surrounding the incident and how Sam acted defensively. The CPS have asked for time to decide if they will retry the defendants on the charges of which there were no verdicts. Nobody should be held in prison under these circumstances. Free Samuel Corner. Shut Elbit down. LIFT THE BAN ON PALESTINE ACTION.

As was this one:

Banning Palestine Action was justified by falsely claiming the group had committed three acts of "terrorism". Now, those claims are completely falling apart.

The first supposed "terror" attack was an action in 2022 in Thales, Glasgow, when five activists scaled the roof of the weapons factory. They were charged with breach of the peace. It was later exposed as never being considered terrorism by Police Scotland.

The second was an action against Elbit's weapons factory in Kent, where actionists allegedly caused over a £1 million in damages. After Palestine Action was banned, the CPS dropped the most serious charge of 'aggravated burglary' in this case. It is yet to go to trial.

The third was the Filton action. The first six to go on trial were acquitted by a jury of aggravated burglary and some counts of violent disorder. The jury did not convict any of them of any offences, showing they didn't believe their actions were criminal.

This has left the proscription case against Palestine Action in tatters. It is only a matter of time before the ban will be lifted.

To the first, Kemi Badenoch’s televised contempt of court ought to make a retrial impossible. To the second, prepare for a false flag.

Surveillance Capitalism Meets Democratic Failure

Precisely one name in the Epstein Files belongs to anyone whom the Left would recognise as being on the Left, and although he has had his uses, Noam Chomsky has spent 71 years and counting at an institution that received more than $100 million per year from the Department of Defense, making anarcho-syndicalism and libertarian socialism cool for youths who might otherwise have become serious activists. By contrast, except under John Smith and Jeremy Corbyn, Peter Mandelson ran the Labour Party for 40 years. He handpicked the enormous 2024 intake of Labour MPs, he conducted the Cabinet reshuffle last September, his acolytes remain in every key position from Downing Street Chief of Staff down, and Paul Knaggs writes:

It’s a big club, and you ain’t in it. George Carlin’s line cuts deeper every year. But here’s the democratic demand he didn’t make explicit: we may not be in the club, but we have the right to know who is.

British law requires MPs and police officers to declare membership in Freemasonry. The rationale is straightforward: secretive networks create opportunities for patronage, preferment, and conflicts of interest that undermine public trust. If we demand transparency about local lodge memberships, surely we should demand the same for global elite coordination forums.

Yet membership in the Trilateral Commission, an invitation-only organisation explicitly designed to shape policy beyond democratic accountability, requires no such declaration. Peter Mandelson belongs to it. So did Jeffrey Epstein. Keir Starmer served as a member while simultaneously claiming to represent socialist principles as Jeremy Corbyn’s shadow Brexit secretary. And the networks connecting these men extend directly to Peter Thiel, whose surveillance company Palantir now controls access to NHS patient data, police intelligence systems, and nuclear weapons infrastructure.

At the centre of the Mandelson scandal sits not one compromised individual but an architecture of elite capture. Overlapping memberships. Off-the-record meetings. Business partnerships that continue even after criminal convictions. And revolving doors that ensure the same names circulate through government, corporate boardrooms, and policy forums designed to insulate elite consensus from democratic volatility.

This is not conspiracy theory. This is institutional architecture operating in plain sight.

At its centre sits a network of overlapping elite institutions that connects Epstein, Mandelson, and Palantir founder Peter Thiel through a web of business interests, intelligence connections, and membership in one of the world’s most powerful private organisations: the Trilateral Commission and the Trilateral Web.

The parliamentary transcript from 4 February reveals MPs demanding answers about how Mandelson passed vetting despite his documented ties to Epstein. What they did not discuss is how both men belonged to the same exclusive policy group, or how Mandelson’s lobbying firm helped embed Thiel’s surveillance company into Britain’s most sensitive systems while Thiel was simultaneously in business partnership with Epstein. These are not coincidences. They are the architecture of elite capture.

The Epstein Files: A Trilateral Connection

The latest Department of Justice document release confirms what researchers have long suspected. Jeffrey Epstein was not simply a financier with powerful friends. He was a member of the Trilateral Commission, the invitation-only policy forum founded in 1973 by David Rockefeller to coordinate elite interests across North America, Europe and Japan.

This interconnected network, referred to as the Trilateral Web, underscores the influence and reach of these elite individuals.

How does a college dropout from Brooklyn with no formal financial qualifications gain entry to one of the world’s most exclusive policy organisations? According to the Commission’s own documentation, membership is determined by “economic weight and political influence.” Standard networks of capital do not explain Epstein’s admission. Something else was operating.

In audio recordings now public, Epstein recounted his relationship with David Rockefeller directly. “He formed something called the Trilateral Commission,” Epstein told Steve Bannon. “The Trilateral Commission is some spooky stuff. People said it was something the people that the Illuminati and there’s some mystery about it, people that ran the world.”

Epstein then explained Rockefeller’s rationale. “David said most countries, the politicians get elected for four years or eight years. Someone’s there for four years and then they’re not there anymore. The most important people to have stability and consistency would be businessmen. So he formed this Trilateral Commission of businessmen and politicians from three major continents.”

What Epstein understood, and what the Commission represents, is elite consensus formation beyond democratic accountability. Politicians serve fixed terms and face voters. Capital moves freely across borders and answers to no electorate.

Mandelson’s Double Connection

Peter Mandelson appears on Trilateral Commission membership lists for the European Group. He also appears in Epstein’s contact book no fewer than ten times, with entries for his direct line, home, and country home.

The DOJ files released on 30 January 2026 reveal that Epstein wired £10,000 to Mandelson’s husband, Reinaldo Avila da Silva, in September 2009, several months after Epstein’s release from his first prison term for soliciting prostitution from a minor. This was not a historical friendship that pre-dated Epstein’s conviction. This was active contact after Epstein’s crimes were publicly known and legally established.

Virginia Giuffre, one of Epstein’s primary accusers, testified in 2011 that she was “introduced to Mr Mandelson at a dinner party” at Epstein’s New York residence. BBC reporting confirmed that Mandelson lobbied Tony Blair for a meeting with Epstein at Downing Street in May 2002. A civil servant’s memo from that period described Epstein as “a friend of Bill Clinton and Peter Mandelson.”

Two Trilateral Commission members. One convicted of crimes against children. The other facilitating his access to the highest levels of British government. And now, both men are at the centre of a scandal about how surveillance technology entered Britain’s most sensitive infrastructure.

The Thiel-Epstein Business Partnership

Documents seen by Labour Heartlands reveal the depth and duration of Peter Theil’s personal business relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. This was not casual acquaintance. It was active partnership that continued years after Epstein’s 2008 conviction.

In 2014, Epstein became a co-owner of Peter Thiel’s Valar Ventures, investing $40 million in a business partnership that would continue until Epstein’s 2019 arrest. Ehud Barak, former Israeli prime minister, described Valar as ‘co-owned’ by Thiel and Epstein as they bought into the Israeli surveillance technology firm Carbyne.

The timing is significant. In 2018, Palantir Technologies hired Mandelson’s lobbying firm, Global Counsel, to facilitate the company’s penetration of UK Government contracts. At the same time, Epstein remained an active Valar partner receiving confidential investment opportunities from Thiel’s fund.

Palantir, founded by Thiel in 2003 with seed funding from the CIA’s venture arm In-Q-Tel, now holds more than £670 million in UK Government contracts spanning nuclear weapons systems, NHS patient records, Ministry of Defence operations, and police intelligence databases.

If Mandelson’s links to Epstein disqualify him from holding power, why does the company controlled by Epstein’s business partner and co-owner retain access to Britain’s most sensitive national security infrastructure?

Trilateral Networks and British Politics 

Keir Starmer was a member of the Trilateral Commission. According to membership records, Starmer joined between March 2017 and October 2018 while serving as Jeremy Corbyn’s shadow Brexit secretary. He maintained membership until sometime between April 2021 and June 2022, covering his early period as Labour leader.

During his time as a member, Starmer served alongside two former heads of the CIA: John Deutch and David Petraeus. Jami Miscik, CIA deputy director for intelligence from 2002-5, also sat alongside him. John Negroponte, director of US national intelligence under George W Bush, and two former chairmen of the US National Intelligence Council also served with Starmer.

Declassified UK reported that Starmer never declared this membership to parliament, despite other MPs doing so. When asked about his Trilateral membership, Starmer did not respond.

While official Trilateral Commission membership lists do not list Peter Thiel as a current member, his secretive “Dialog” group is heavily populated with Trilateral Commission members, including Eric Schmidt, Larry Summers, Anne-Marie Slaughter, Robert Rubin, and Richard Haass. Thiel also sits on the Bilderberg Steering Committee, the elite networking forum where David Rockefeller and Zbigniew Brzezinski received blessing to establish the Trilateral Commission in 1972.

These overlapping networks operate beyond public scrutiny. Membership is by invitation only. Meetings are strictly off the record. And the same names circulate through multiple organisations, creating an interlocking directorate of elite power.

The Palantir Pipeline 

The revolving door between the NHS, Global Counsel, and Palantir demonstrates how institutional capture operates in practice.

Matthew Swindells, deputy chief executive of NHS England, joined Global Counsel in 2019. Indra Joshi, former NHSX director of AI, and Harjeet Dhaliwal, deputy director of data services at NHS England, both joined Palantir in 2022.

Meanwhile, Palantir hired Global Counsel for lobbying as it sought to cement UK Government contracts. Co-founded by Peter Mandelson, the firm counted Palantir among its clients during the period when the company was securing its massive NHS contract.

In February 2025, as Mandelson served as UK Ambassador to the United States, he personally arranged Keir Starmer’s visit to Palantir’s Washington headquarters. No official record was kept. No minutes. No transcript. Just access, facilitated by a man whose firm represented the company and who held significant financial interest in Global Counsel’s success.

The Good Law Project later confirmed that Mandelson’s Global Counsel firm represented Palantir at the time of Starmer’s visit. Despite this apparent conflict of interest, no official records of the meeting were recorded by the Government.

Speaking after the meeting, Palantir’s UK boss Louis Mosley told The House magazine: “You could see in [Starmer’s] eyes that he gets it. The ambition is there, the will is there.”

The Epstein-Thiel Middle East Connection 

Emails released in the latest Epstein files reveal coordinated discussions between Epstein and Thiel about destabilising the Middle East. Messages reference Iraq, Iran, Libya, Syria, Palestine, Lebanon and Egypt, suggesting attempts to advance Western interests in the region.

In audio recordings from the DOJ release, Ehud Barak describes how, as he was leaving official government service in Israel, he turned to Jeffrey Epstein for guidance. Epstein told him he needed to look at a Peter Thiel company called Palantir.

The latest files show Epstein helped Barak establish business initiatives in Ivory Coast between 2012 and 2014. Epstein coordinated Barak’s meetings during the UN General Assembly, connected him with Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara’s chief of staff and officials, and helped arrange connections with the president’s family. Barak, meanwhile, commissioned former Israeli intelligence officers to produce technical plans for nationwide phone and internet monitoring.

This private initiative later became the basis of a 2014 defence and internal security agreement between Israel and Ivory Coast. Surveillance technology, elite networks, and geopolitical strategy converging through Epstein’s connections.

Parliamentary Questions, Inadequate Answers

The 4 February parliamentary debate revealed the extent of governmental failure. Shadow ministers challenged the Prime Minister’s judgment in appointing Mandelson despite knowing about his Epstein connections. They demanded release of the vetting documents that supposedly cleared him.

MPs highlighted that the Prime Minister was aware that Mandelson had an ongoing friendship with Epstein that continued beyond the conviction. It was not only in the public domain. In January 2024, a Financial Times journalist told the Prime Minister about it directly. The Cabinet Office propriety and ethics team included it in their briefing note to Downing Street.

The New Statesman reported that the propriety team’s report contained warnings about potential conflicts of interest surrounding Global Counsel, the lobbying firm which Mandelson established and in which he retained about 28% stake. The firm had Russian and Chinese clients, which reportedly raised serious concerns with the ethics team.

One MP captured the absurdity: “What is the level of relationship that is acceptable with a pedophile? Is it coffee in the morning or dinner at night? What is that level? There should be none with a convicted pedophile.”

Yet the debate never touched on the Trilateral connections, the Palantir contracts, or the business partnership between Thiel and Epstein. The questions were about one man’s judgment. The systemic capture remained invisible.

Russia, Crypto, and Convergent Interests 

The Epstein files reveal another dimension. Correspondence shows Epstein maintained close contacts with Russian officials, including Sergey Belyakov, who graduated from the FSB spy academy and served as senior advisor to oligarch Oleg Deripaska before becoming Russia’s Deputy Minister of Economic Development.

In 2013, Epstein pitched to Belyakov what he described as “a new form of money, on a worldwide basis” using blockchain technology. He urged Russia to “reinvent the financial system of the 21st century.”

Peter Thiel was a keen admirer of cryptocurrency and its ability to provide an alternative to government-controlled money. He once declared, “Bitcoin is what PayPal should have been.”

As Epstein and Thiel’s finances aligned through Valar Ventures, so did their politics. Both men were unusually important early backers of Donald Trump’s first presidency. Emails capture the tone of their relationship. Epstein wrote to Thiel, “I liked your Trump exaggerations, not lies,” before suggesting Thiel “visit me [in the] Caribbean.” 

Thiel broke with much of Silicon Valley to endorse Trump and pour millions into pro-Trump PACs. Epstein’s correspondence shows close tracking of Trump-Clinton polling, campaign personnel, and appointments linked to Bitcoin and fintech.

Surveillance Capitalism Meets Democratic Failure 

Palantir is not a neutral technology provider. It is a surveillance firm with deep ties to security agencies, foreign governments, and a political ideology hostile to transparency and civil liberties. / Peter Thiel, the company’s chairman and co-founder, has publicly stated he “no longer think[s] that freedom and democracy are compatible.” Speaking at the Oxford Union, he suggested the UK public’s attachment to the NHS was a case of “Stockholm syndrome,” adding: “Highways create traffic jams, welfare creates poverty, schools make people dumb and the NHS makes people sick.”

This is the man whose company now has access to NHS patient data, police intelligence systems, and nuclear weapons infrastructure. And he gained that access with help from a lobbying firm founded by a man who had been compromised by a convicted sex offender who was also a Trilateral Commission member and Thiel’s business partner.

CEO Alex Karp has been equally blunt about Palantir’s ambitions. “When the whole world is using Palantir,” he declared, “they can still not like us. They’ll have no choice.”

This is not the voice of a public servant. This is the voice of a company that sees democracy as an obstacle to be managed, not a value to be upheld.

The Pattern of Elite Capture 

What emerges from these connections is not conspiracy but institutional architecture. The Trilateral Commission creates spaces where elite consensus forms beyond democratic accountability. Epstein used his membership to cultivate relationships with powerful figures across business, politics, and intelligence. Mandelson leveraged both his Trilateral connections and his Epstein access to position Global Counsel as a broker between corporate power and government contracts. 

Thiel, operating through his Dialog group packed with Trilateral members and his position on the Bilderberg Steering Committee, maintains similar networks. His business partnership with Epstein continued for five years after Epstein’s conviction, ending only with Epstein’s 2019 arrest.

The revolving door spins. NHS officials join Palantir. Palantir hires Mandelson’s firm. Mandelson arranges prime ministerial meetings. No records are kept. No accountability exists. And the surveillance infrastructure embeds deeper into the British state.

The Unanswered Questions 

The parliamentary debate of 4 February asked why Mandelson passed vetting despite his Epstein connections. The real question is why the vetting process examined only individual relationships rather than the institutional networks that create systemic risk.

Did the propriety and ethics team investigate Mandelson’s Trilateral Commission membership alongside Epstein? Did they examine how Mandelson’s Global Counsel profited from lobbying for a company whose founder was simultaneously in business partnership with Epstein? Did they consider whether Palantir itself represents a security risk given Thiel’s documented relationship with a convicted sex offender who maintained extensive Russian intelligence connections?

These questions were never asked because the networks themselves remain invisible to conventional scrutiny. The Trilateral Commission does not register as a lobby group. Its meetings are off the record. Its membership is public but its activities are not. The same applies to Bilderberg, to elite policy forums, to the revolving doors between government, consultancy, and corporate power.

And while MPs debate whether one peer should have been appointed ambassador, the surveillance infrastructure that peer helped establish continues to expand. Palantir’s NHS contract runs until February 2027. Its access to defence systems, police databases, and nuclear weapons data remains intact. The technology embeds deeper while the scandal focuses on personalities.

Democratic Accountability or Elite Management? 

The Trilateral Commission’s 1975 publication, “The Crisis of Democracy,” argued that democratic societies faced a crisis precisely because too many people were participating in politics. The solution, the Commission proposed, was to reduce expectations of democratic responsiveness and strengthen governance by elite consensus.

It should be noted that Noam Chomsky, a lifelong critic of elite institutions including the Trilateral Commission, has himself been implicated in the latest Epstein file releases. This is not mentioned to discredit Chomsky’s analysis of elite power structures. Rather, it demonstrates how thoroughly these networks penetrate even among those who publicly oppose them. The architecture of elite capture does not spare its critics. If anything, Chomsky’s connections to Epstein underscore the argument he makes about institutional power: these networks operate with such reach that proximity to them becomes nearly unavoidable for anyone moving through elite academic, political, or intellectual circles. The question is not whether one encounters these networks, but whether one serves them.

This is not historical curiosity. This is the operating logic visible in the Mandelson scandal. Democratic accountability is for the managed classes. Elite networks operate beyond such constraints.

Keir Starmer’s Trilateral membership during his time as shadow Brexit secretary represents the same pattern. He joined an organisation explicitly committed to elite management of democratic processes while simultaneously claiming to represent a socialist political movement under Jeremy Corbyn. The contradiction was never resolved because it was never acknowledged.

Mandelson’s Trilateral membership alongside Epstein demonstrates how these networks operate. Both men moved through the same elite spaces. Both cultivated relationships across business, politics, and intelligence. Both operated beyond conventional democratic oversight. One happened to be a convicted sex offender. The other happened to lobby for a surveillance company whose founder was that offender’s business partner.

These are not separate scandals. They are the same scandal. The institutional architecture that enabled Epstein to operate for decades is the same architecture that embeds Palantir into the British state. Elite networks, off-the-record meetings, revolving doors, and the systematic exclusion of democratic oversight. 

What Must Happen Now

The British government’s swift action to sever Mandelson’s appointment acknowledges that his relationship with Epstein posed a continuing national security threat. That logic must now extend to Palantir. A company controlled by a man who was co-owner of an investment fund with Epstein, who maintained active business partnership with him until his 2019 arrest, and who operates within the same elite networks that enabled Epstein’s decades of impunity.

Parliament must demand full disclosure of:

  • Starmer should resign 
  • All communications between Mandelson and Palantir while Global Counsel represented the company 
  • The complete vetting reports that supposedly cleared Mandelson for ambassadorial appointment 
  • The nature and extent of Thiel’s business partnership with Epstein through Valar Ventures 
  • How Palantir gained access to NHS data, defence systems, and police databases while its founder maintained financial ties to a convicted sex offender 
  • Whether the propriety and ethics team examined Trilateral Commission connections as part of security vetting 
  • What due diligence was conducted on Palantir’s leadership before awarding contracts worth £670 million

The contracts with Palantir must be suspended pending independent security review. Not simply reviewed. Suspended. The precautionary principle applies when national security infrastructure is controlled by companies whose leadership maintained active business partnerships with convicted criminals.

The revolving door between government, consultancy firms, and surveillance companies must be closed. Mandatory cooling-off periods of at least five years for senior officials before joining firms they regulated or awarded contracts to. Criminal penalties for officials who fail to declare conflicts of interest.

And the Trilateral Commission, Bilderberg, and similar elite policy forums must be subject to the same transparency requirements as any organisation seeking to influence government policy. Mandatory disclosure of membership by public officials. Public records of meetings. Registration as lobby groups if they claim to shape policy.

The Truth We Must Face 

Democracy fails not through dramatic coups, there is no storming the Bastille; it comes through quiet capture. Through networks that operate beyond scrutiny. Through revolving doors that ensure the same names circulate through government, corporate boardrooms, and elite policy forums. Through the institutional architecture that treats democratic accountability as a problem to be managed rather than a principle to be upheld.

The Mandelson scandal exposes this architecture because Epstein’s crimes were so egregious that even elite consensus could not protect him. But Epstein was not an aberration. He was a product of these networks. His ability to operate for decades despite multiple investigations, despite victims coming forward, despite evidence accumulating, demonstrates how elite protection functions.

The same networks that protected Epstein now embed Palantir into the British state. The same revolving doors that facilitated his access now facilitate corporate capture of public infrastructure. The same elite consensus that treated his crimes as private failings rather than systemic symptoms now treats the Mandelson scandal as a question of individual judgment rather than institutional corruption.

This is what institutional capture looks like. Not dramatic takeovers but quiet coordination. Not conspiracy but convergence of interest. Not darkness but daylight, if anyone cares to look.

Peter Mandelson’s connections to Epstein removed him from power. Peter Thiel’s identical connections leave his company embedded in the most sensitive systems of the British state. The scandal is not that one peer was compromised. The scandal is that the architecture of compromise remains intact.

When convicted sex offenders belong to the same elite networks as prime ministers and surveillance capitalists, we are not governed by democracy. We are managed by a class that has exempted itself from the accountability it demands of others.