Why are Trump, Kushner and Netanyahu trying so hard to install someone linked very closely to Epstein as the govenor of Gaza?
Tony Blair has his carreer to thank to Peter Mandelson, who was sacked as US ambassador recently for his close ties to Jeff Epstein.
Mandelson has close ties to Nat Rothschild, Oleg Deripaska and may also know the Russian journalist Alexander Zamyslov, who claimed in 2016 in an interview with Russian state TV that Kushner had helped them obtain visas for the interview about billionaires Gates and Soros and their plans to devastate the USA with viruses and vaccines.
When I posted up the claim, I was nearly arrested using criminal means by corrupted justice official sparking Appeals Prosecutor probe E 17 449 which is still open and can be used to issue arrest warrants against Kushner and Trump today!!!
It was also Peter Mandelson who got Tony Blair off the hook for the suspicious death of Uk weapons expert Dr David Kelly by derailing a Coroner s inquiry.
Tony Blair was found to have manipulated intel to justify joining George Bush in the war on Iraq, Afghanistan by the Chilcott inquiry and the death of David Kelly was very convenient for that.
Why, in the midst of the growing Epsein scandal, do Trump, Kushner and Netanyahu chose Tony Blair for a key position? Is it to get hold of the valuable waterfront property which Kushner mentioned?
From media
Tomorrow will mark 20 years to the day that Dr David Kelly was seen alive for the last time, when he left his Oxfordshire home to take an innocent-seeming afternoon walk.
The body of the Government weapons expert was found in nearby woods at 9.20am the next day; his left wrist had been cut open, and an empty pack of painkilling tablets was sitting in his jacket pocket.
His assumed suicide – a week after he had been outed by Tony Blair's administration as the source of a BBC story claiming that a No 10 dossier on
Saddam Hussein's weapons capacity had been 'sexed up' to justify the war in Iraq – brought the Prime Minister to the brink of political extinction.
Mr Blair's survival was effectively 'fixed' by his Praetorian Guard: Peter Mandelson, Alastair Campbell and Lord Falconer – all of whom remain influential figures, preparing for what they hope will be a new Labour Government under Sir Keir Starmer.
Mr Blair's narrow escape was secured after a coroner's inquest into Dr Kelly's death was derailed and replaced with a Government-appointed inquiry
chaired by Lord Hutton. In January 2004, Hutton cleared the Government of wrongdoing and placed the blame on the BBC, leading to the resignation of chairman Gavyn Davies and director-general Greg Dyke.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12303101/The-cronies-saved-Tony-Blairs-skin-suspicious-death-inspector-Dr-David-Kelly.html
The Chilcot inquiry has delivered a damning verdict on the decision by former prime minister Tony Blair to commit British troops to the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. It says:
The UK chose to join the invasion before peaceful options had been exhausted
Chilcot is withering about Blair’s choice to join the US invasion. He says: “We have concluded that the UK chose to join the invasion of Iraq before the peaceful options for disarmament had been exhausted. Military action at that time was not a last resort.”
Blair deliberately exaggerated the threat posed by Saddam Hussein
Chilcot finds that Blair deliberately exaggerated the threat posed by the Iraqi regime as he sought to make the case for military action to MPs and the
public in the buildup to the invasion in 2002 and 2003. The then prime minister disregarded warnings about the potential consequences of military action, and relied too heavily on his own beliefs, rather than the more nuanced judgments of the intelligence services. “The judgments about Iraq’s capabilities ...
were presented with a certainty that was not justified,” the report says.
Blair promised George Bush: ’I will be with you, whatever’
Tony Blair wrote to George W Bush eight months before the Iraq invasion to offer his unqualified backing for war well before UN weapons inspectors had
completed their work, saying: “I will be with you, whatever.” In a six-page memo marked secret and personal, the then British prime minister told Bush,
US president at the time, in July 2002 that the removal of Saddam Hussein would “free up the region” even if Iraqis may “feel ambivalent about being invaded”. It was one of 29 letters Blair sent to Bush in the run-up to the Iraq war, during the conflict and in its devastating aftermath, released on
Wednesday as part of the Chilcot report.
The decision to invade was made in unsatisfactory circumstances
Chilcot finds that the decision made by Tony Blair’s cabinet to invade was made in circumstances that were “far from satisfactory”. The inquiry did not
reach a view on the legality of the war, saying this could only be assessed by a “properly constituted and internationally recognised court”, but did make a
damning assessment of how the decision was made. The process for deciding that the war was legal is described as “perfunctory” by the inquiry, while “no
formal record was made of that decision, and the precise grounds on which it was made remains unclear”.
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/jul/06/iraq-inquiry-key-points-from-the-chilcot-report
Lord Mandelson has flown to the holiday island of Corfu for a week's break, his spokesman said today, despite the furore caused by his stay there last summer.
The business secretary became embroiled in a political storm after spending time, along with the shadow chancellor, George Osborne, on the yacht of Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2009/aug/04/mandelson-holiday-corfu
Peter Mandelson, who can't bear to remain cut off from centres of power, has been sending some intriguing signals to the new regime in Whitehall.
Messages are reaching ministers from the Prince of Darkness reporting that he has been on interesting overseas visits. I would be delighted to brief you on
my impressions gathered during visits to China and Russia, Mandelson is saying.
It is quite normal for former ministers to offer advice to the government, even if they hail from a different party. As a former European trade commissioner
Mandelson has an impressive range of contacts around the world, particularly in China and India; his insights would be invaluable to ministers.
Some government sources say they have picked up hints that Mandelson would be interested in doing more than providing informal advice. As one of Tony
Blair's closest lieutenants, Mandelson knows the attraction for prime ministers of creating a big tent by appointing political opponents to high profile jobs.
Any hopes Mandelson may entertain of winning a top job (the ambassadorships to Washington or Paris are mentioned) are expected to be blocked by the
second most powerful figure in the government. George Osborne has never forgiven Mandelson for turning on him during the 2008 'Yachtgate' saga after
they both boarded a Russian oligarch's gin palace in Corfu.
The chancellor will have been reminded of Mandelson by last night's film on BBC Four by Hannah Rothschild, sister of the peer's great friend and
Osborne's Oxford contemporary Nat Rothschild. The Mandelson / Osborne row erupted after they visited the infamous gin palace owned by the Russian
oligarch, Oleg Deripaska, while it was moored by the Rothschild family villa in Corfu in the summer of 2008.
The Rothschild film features an encounter between Mandelson and Osborne from the "spin room" during one of the general election leaders' television
debates. Osborne looks slightly awkward as Mandelson, surrounded by Labour figures, taunts him from one side of the room.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/wintour-and-watt/2010/nov/24/peter-mandelson-georgeosborne
Peter Mandelson has been sacked as the UK's ambassador to the US, after revelations emerged about his friendship with the convicted paedophile Jeffrey
Epstein.
Given the job in December 2024, he was the man Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer tasked with building links to the incoming Trump administration.
...
In 1994, he played a pivotal role in getting Tony Blair elected as party leader - crucially backing him over Gordon Brown, who had been seen as the heir
apparent.
...
In 1997 their work paid off, and following the landslide victory, Mandelson was given the job of minister without portfolio and then trade secretary.
The archetypal spin doctor, his reputation as a behind-the scenes fixer, schemer and schmoozer earned him the nickname, "the Prince of Darkness".
In 1998, he was forced into the first of his government resignations when it was revealed he had received a secret loan of £373,000 from his ministerial
colleague Geoffrey Robinson.
Less than a year later he was back in government taking on the position of Northern Ireland secretary.
He lasted in that job until January 2001, when he quit over allegations of misconduct over a passport application for the Hinduja brothers. An inquiry later
cleared him of wrongdoing.
...
He had holidayed with Trump's Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and made connections with Mark Burnett, the TV producer of the Apprentice, the show
that sparked Trump's rise to power.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cr4q61y399xo
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15179961/Hamas-reject-plans-Tony-Blair-run-Gaza.html
WASHINGTON — In a social media video, Rep.-Elect Adelita Grijalva, D-Ariz., who won a special election more than two weeks ago to fill her late
father’s Arizona House seat, is calling on House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., to swear her in.
“Speaker Johnson continues to make excuses, but all the while, southern Arizona still does not have a voice in Washington,” said Grijalva. “First, it was
certification and then it was whether Congress is in session. Hell, they won’t even end their vacations to come to work.”
What You Need To Know
Rep. Thomas Massie is calling on House Speaker Mike Johnson to stop delaying the swearing-in of a newly-elected Democrat
Rep.-Elect Adelita Grijalva won a special election more than two weeks ago to fill her late father's House seat
Grijalva is expected to deliver the final necessary signature on a discharge petition led by Massie
That petition would force a vote on legislation requiring the Justice Department to release its files in the Jeffrey Epstein case
Once in office, Grijalva,is expected to deliver the final necessary signature on a discharge petition led by Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Crescent Springs.
That petition would force a vote on legislation requiring the Justice Department to release its files in the case of the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey
Epstein.
Reached by phone Wednesday, Massie said there should be nothing stopping Johnson, given that the Speaker can administer the oath during what is
known as a pro forma session, which allows the House to quickly gavel in on out-of-session weeks when there’s nothing else on the agenda.
“He did this for two Republicans from Florida during a pro forma session and he’s not doing it for the Democrat,” Massie said. “This is one of those things
that really shouldn’t be partisan. As soon as you’re elected, you should be sworn in.”
https://spectrumnews1.com/ky/louisville/news/2025/10/09/massie-johnson-grijalva-
Rep. Thomas Massie is turning his defiance of President Trump into dollars.
The Kentucky Republican raised more than $750,000 in the last three months — surpassing his previous best fundraising quarter since entering Congress
by more than $100,000.
“A lot of times, candidates get tripped up when Trump endorses their opponents because they can’t raise money, that basically shuts off all the fuel to the
engine of their campaign, and that is not the case with me,” Mr. Massie told The Washington Times.
Mr. Massie credits the surge in donations to Republican voters.
“Every time he’s attacked me, there has been a renewed wave of donations, and they’re not coming from Democrats,” he said. “They’re coming from
Republicans, many of whom like Donald Trump and just want to see an independent voice in Congress.”
Due Oct. 15, Mr. Massie’s latest financials show him with more than $2 million in the bank. This puts him on solid footing in the 4th Congressional District,
which stretches from the eastern suburbs of Louisville to the state’s northeastern border along the Ohio River.
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2025/oct/9/thomas-massie-banks-career-best-fundraising-haul-despite-trump-forces/
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