Peter Mandelson’s 15-year-old policy-influence shop Global Counsel became the first corporate casualty of the newly-released Epstein files, entering bankruptcy within weeks of disclosures that its founder leaked government secrets and received unexplained payments from the convicted sex offender.
The flash collapse
Global Counsel Ltd.—the Westminster- and Washington-linked advisory group Mandelson co-launched in 2010—halted trading Friday after client departures torpedoed cash flow. Interpath Advisory was appointed administrator and 80 London employees walked out with redundancy letters, leaving a skeleton team to sell what remains of a once-130-person operation.
The firm had banked on Mandelson’s 2024 board resignation and February share sale to cauterize reputational bleeding, but the tactic failed. Banking, tech and energy clients cancelled retainers almost overnight once U.S. Justice Department tranches showed Mandelson swapping potentially market-moving U.K. policy information with Jeffrey Epstein in 2009 and accepting payments totaling $75,000 in 2003-04.
What the Epstein cache revealed
- 2009 email traffic shows Mandelson—then business secretary—forwarding embargoed government thinking on aluminum tariffs to Epstein within hours of receiving it.
- Spreadsheet ledgers list two transfers from Epstein-controlled accounts to entities linked to Mandelson’s husband, Reinaldo Avila da Silva.
- Metadata indicates Mandelson continued friendly correspondence after Epstein’s 2008 Florida conviction for soliciting a minor.
Police opened a misconduct-in-public-office probe 24 hours after the documents hit; officers have since searched Mandelson’s London residence and a Wiltshire property.
Political tremors reach Starmer
The implosion widens fallout for Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who defied aides to gift Mandelson the U.S. ambassadorship last May. Labour’s poll lead shrank seven points during the January leaks, and Westminster whips now fear a summer leadership challenge if more emails emerge.
Whitehall will publish vetting notes within 30 days, aiming to prove Mandelson concealed the depth of Epstein ties. Downing Street sources say Starmer fired Mandelson in September once a first email batch surfaced, but critics argue damage was baked in by then.
Why the consultancy model buckled
Global Counsel’s revenue—estimated at £28 million last year—rested on three pillars:
- Privileged political access, chiefly Mandelson’s phone book.
- Reputation for “grown-up” Labour links that corporates could sell to investors.
- Promise of early warning on U.K. and EU regulation.
The Epstein revelations simultaneously vaporized pillar one and two, making three impossible to deliver. Interpath confirms no buyer has emerged for the operating company; asset liquidation will settle secured creditors first, leaving little for shareholders.
Legal exposure and next steps
Mandelson has not been charged with any crime and denies cash transfers ever reached him. Yet the Metropolitan Police inquiry is expected to run at least six months; prosecutors will decide whether disclosure of market-sensitive data constitutes misconduct. Parallel scrutiny looms in Washington where the Foreign Agents Registration Act unit has requested lobbying logs covering Mandelson’s embassy tenure.
Corporate-finance lawyers predict unsecured creditors—including former staff owed notice pay—will recover cents on the pound once property leases and intellectual property are sold.
Historical lens: Mandelson’s pattern of resignations
- 1998: quits Trade & Industry role over undisclosed home-loan from fellow MP.
- 2001: leaves Northern Ireland Office after accusations he helped a passport applicant fast-track citizenship.
- 2026: third career terminus—this time taking an entire company with him.
Each scandal revolves around the same vulnerability: leveraging public office for private network gain.
The Global Counsel bankruptcy marks the moment Epstein’s posthumous shock-wave jumps the Atlantic and starts vaporizing real-world institutions. With lobbying contracts now a reputational minefield, Westminster’s influence economy is bracing for wider client flight and tighter disclosure rules. Stay ahead of every twist with the fastest, most authoritative analysis—read more breaking investigations only on onlytrustedinfo.com.