Welcome back to World Brief, where we’re looking at the fallout of the Epstein files for Britain’s Labour Party, China criticizing the United Kingdom’s expanded visa program for Hong Kongers, and another lethal U.S. strike on an alleged drug-trafficking boat.
‘Downing Street Is Hemorrhaging’
Pressure is mounting for British Prime Minister Keir Starmer to resign over his decision to appoint Peter Mandelson, who maintained close ties with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, to be the British ambassador to the United States.
Welcome back to World Brief, where we’re looking at the fallout of the Epstein files for Britain’s Labour Party, China criticizing the United Kingdom’s expanded visa program for Hong Kongers, and another lethal U.S. strike on an alleged drug-trafficking boat.
‘Downing Street Is Hemorrhaging’
Pressure is mounting for British Prime Minister Keir Starmer to resign over his decision to appoint Peter Mandelson, who maintained close ties with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, to be the British ambassador to the United States.
Starmer fired Mandelson in September following the publication of emails from the 2000s that showed Mandelson offering his support for Epstein, including suggesting that Epstein’s 2008 conviction for soliciting prostitution from an underage girl was wrongful and should be challenged. On Thursday, the prime minister also issued a public apology to Epstein’s victims, saying, “Sorry for having believed this man’s [Mandelson’s] lies and appointed him,” after new evidence emerged indicating that Mandelson had leaked sensitive government information to and accepted money from Epstein.
U.K. police have started a criminal investigation into Mandelson related to his sharing of that information, though he maintains that he did not act criminally. He has not been accused of sexual misconduct.
Growing fragmentation within Starmer’s Labour Party—as well as a series of high-profile resignations at Downing Street—have tested the British leader’s mandate just 19 months after taking office.
On Monday, Scottish Labour Party leader Anas Sarwar became the most senior Labour figure to call for Starmer’s resignation. “The distraction needs to end, and the leadership in Downing Street has to change,” Sarwar said. His comments came the same day that Starmer’s communications chief Tim Allan quit his post and just one day after Starmer’s chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, resigned—both due to the fallout from Mandelson’s ties to Epstein.
This unpredictability is likely to worsen with the expected resignation of Cabinet Secretary Chris Wormald in the coming days.
“Downing Street is hemorrhaging,” John Kampfner argues in Foreign Policy. “The U.K. moving in one direction, Scotland in another—the potential for constitutional as well as political chaos is growing by the day.” Pollsters predict a calamitous showing for Labour in upcoming local council as well as Scottish and Welsh elections, Kampfner notes.
Opposition lawmakers have jumped on the scandal to call for Starmer’s ouster and demand new elections. “What I’m seeing is a government that is completely adrift,” Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch said. “The prime minister is blowing around like a plastic bag in the wind. If he can’t do the job, then yes, he should go.”
But Starmer has so far refused to bow to pressure. “After having fought so hard for the chance to change our country, I’m not prepared to walk away from my mandate and my responsibility to my country, or to plunge us into chaos, as others have done,” Starmer said over the weekend. He stressed that his focus will remain on preventing the populist Reform U.K. party from taking power at a time when far-right ideologies are gaining traction across Europe.
Many in Labour appear to agree. Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy, Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves, and Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper have all pledged their support for Starmer. And on Monday, Labour parliamentarian (and potential leadership rival) Angela Rayner issued her “full support” for the administration, assuaging fears that she may seek Starmer’s seat.
Still, the mood in London remains bleak as Labour scrambles to maintain power after years of Conservative rule. “It’s painful. It’s like watching a fatal car crash in slow motion,” one Labour lawmaker, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters.
Today’s Most Read
What We’re Following
Expanded visa program. The Chinese Embassy in London lambasted the British government on Tuesday for expanding a visa program for Hong Kong residents. The new policy, announced on Monday, will allow British visa-holders’ children who were under age 18 in June 1997, when Hong Kong shifted from British to Chinese rule, to apply for status independently from their parents.
This scheme is “reprehensible” and “despicable,” a Chinese Embassy spokesperson said in a statement. “China has always firmly opposed the U.K.’s manipulation and interference in China’s internal affairs.”
London first launched the visa program in 2021 following the imposition of China’s sweeping national security law in Hong Kong. Monday’s expansion comes the same day that a Hong Kong court sentenced pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai to 20 years in prison for publicly supporting mass anti-government protests in 2019. Lai is a British citizen, leading Starmer to call for his release during the prime minister’s meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping last month.
Another boat strike. U.S. forces targeted an alleged drug-trafficking boat in the eastern Pacific Ocean on Monday, killing two people, according to U.S. Southern Command. This was the 38th strike claimed by the U.S. military on such vessels in the Pacific and Caribbean regions, and it brings the total death toll to around 130 people killed since the operations began in September 2025.
However, Monday’s strike was a rarity, in that a lone survivor emerged from the attack. Until now, only two other people are known to have survived U.S. strikes on the alleged drug vessels; a third person initially survived an operation last month but was never found and is now presumed dead. U.S. Southern Command notified the U.S. Coast Guard to begin search-and-rescue operations for the survivor from Monday’s attack, though the Coast Guard told CNN that Ecuador’s Maritime Rescue Coordination Center had assumed search-and-rescue coordination efforts.
The Trump administration maintains that these strikes are necessary to combat narcoterrorists seeking to traffic illicit drugs from Latin America into the United States. However, legal experts argue that these assaults amount to extrajudicial killings.
Building bridges. U.S. President Donald Trump threatened on Monday to block the opening of a Canadian-built bridge across the Detroit River that will connect Windsor, Ontario, and Detroit, Michigan. “I will not allow this bridge to open until the United States is fully compensated for everything we have given them [Canada], and also, importantly, Canada treats the United States with the Fairness and Respect that we deserve,” Trump posted on Truth Social, adding that negotiations will begin immediately.
Construction on the six-lane Gordie Howe International Bridge began in 2018. It is set to open in early 2026. The Canadian government funded the entire roughly $4.7 billion project to help ease congestion over the existing Ambassador Bridge and Detroit-Windsor Tunnel. In his post, Trump proposed that Canada give the United States ownership of at least half of the asset, which is already under the public joint ownership of Canada and Michigan.
Trump claimed that Canada built the bridge “with virtually no U.S. content,” but Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens said that U.S. steel was used in the construction from the Michigan side. Most of Trump’s ire, though, centered on the United States’ broader trade relations with its northern neighbor, with the U.S. president lashing out against Canadian retaliatory tariffs on U.S. products—namely, dairy and alcohol—as well as Ottawa’s burgeoning ties with Beijing.
However, some U.S. lawmakers maintain that blocking the bridge will hurt the United States more than it will hurt Canada. “So to shoot yourself in the foot and threaten the Gordie Howe Bridge means that this guy [Trump] has completely lost the plot on what’s good for us versus just what’s spite against the Canadians,” U.S. Sen. Elissa Slotkin of Michigan told The Associated Press.
Odds and Ends
Talk about a long commute. A group of nearly two dozen Buddhist monks from around the world arrived in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday after walking for 15 weeks straight to promote national healing and unity. The so-called Walk for Peace began in Texas on Oct. 25 and stretched 2,300 miles; it is expected to end on Thursday in Annapolis, Maryland. Although the walk proved to be dangerous at times—two monks were injured in November when their escort vehicle was hit by a truck on the highway—the group celebrated their arrival in the nation’s capital. “We walk not to protest, but to awaken the peace that already lives within each of us,” said Bhikkhu Pannakara, the walk’s spiritual leader.
