đ° Full Story
Prime Minister Keir Starmer on 26 March dismissed claims of a deliberate cover-up after the Metropolitan Police published the transcript of a 999 call in which his former chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, reported a government-issued iPhone had been snatched in central London on 20 October 2025.
The call shows McSweeney described the device as a âgovernment phoneâ but did not state he worked at No 10; the force recorded the wrong street (Belgrave Street rather than Belgrave Road) and has reopened its review.
The missing device is significant because it likely contained WhatsApp and other messages with Lord Peter Mandelson, whose disputed appointment as UK ambassador to Washington prompted MPs to force the release of related files.
Downing Street says relevant security teams were notified and the Cabinet Office holds some exchanges; ministers acknowledge corporate devices can have auto-delete functions and stress officials must copy substantive communications into official systems.
Conservatives and even one Labour MP have demanded McSweeney testify to Parliament, while government figures call the episode a âcock-upâ rather than a conspiracy.






đŹ Commentary