Scottish Secretary did not declare meeting with Mandelson's firm

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Paris GourtsoyannisBBC Scotland Westminster correspondent

Getty Images A smiling man with greying black hair is wearing a dark suit, blue shirt and red tieGetty Images

Douglas Alexander was in regular contact with Peter Mandelson ahead of his appointment as the UK's ambassador to the US

Scottish Secretary Douglas Alexander met with Peter Mandelson's lobbying firm to discuss policy within weeks of becoming a minister but it was not publicly declared for a year and a half.

The papers include messages between Lord Mandelson and ministers exchanging advice and news as well as criticism of Labour MPs, the prime minister, and the operation of his office at 10 Downing Street.

Among them are files which confirm Alexander's meeting with Global Counsel in summer 2024 was only added to public transparency logs earlier this year.

Publication of those messages reveal that within weeks of Alexander's appointment as trade minister on 6 July that year, Mandelson was arranging an introduction to one of his colleagues.

On 22 July Alexander wrote to Mandelson: "Thanks for the time yesterday. Send me [redacted] contact details when you can and I'll reach out to him."

That same day, Mandelson wrote an email introduction putting Alexander in touch with someone from Global Counsel.

A week later on 31 July, Alexander contacted Mandelson to tell him he had a meeting that afternoon with the unnamed person "for a proper teach-in session".

Mandelson then follows up on 2 August to ask how the meeting went.

Alexander said: "It was the single most enlightening conversation I've had in the last month on trade so I see why you hold him in such high regard."

PA Media Peter Mandelson has short greying hair and wears dark glasses. He wears a shirt, grey jacket and appears to be outsidePA Media

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The meeting with Global Counsel, which took the form of an online call, was Alexander's first on record with any external organisation as trade minister.

Global Counsel was co-founded by Mandelson in 2010. He resigned from its board in 2024, but continued to own shares.

The company collapsed earlier this year after losing contracts following revelations about Mandelson's friendship with the paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein, owing millions of pounds to its employees and in tax.

Its clients previously included GSK, Shell, JPMorgan, OpenAI and the English Premier League.

UK law requires ministers to report meetings with lobbyists every three months.

However, the anti-corruption campaign group Transparency International UK has shared evidence with the BBC suggesting the public record was only updated to include the meeting on 25 March of this year - after MPs ordered the publication of Mandelson's contacts with ministers on 4 February.

A note on the UK government website states the log "has been updated to reflect a meeting which was previously omitted in error".

It is understood the meeting was attended by civil servants and formally minuted.

Juliet Swann, nations and regions programme manager at Transparency International UK, said: "Declarations of government meetings are the only light shone on the lobbying of ministers at Westminster so to fail to record meetings with influential lobbyists undermines the principle of transparency.

"The lesson from this saga should be that open government in the first place serves the public better than belated dumps of data long after the event."

In messages just after the 2024 general election, Alexander appears to credit Lord Mandelson with his return to parliament as MP for Lothian East, referencing support over several years.

Alexander and the Department for Business and Trade have been approached for comment.


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