Morgan McSweeney is facing his biggest test yet – but could the PM actually sack him?

SIR Keir Starmer’s Chief of General Staff Morgan Mcsweeney has long been pulling the ropes behind the scenes in the Download Street. After seating that government officials were booted and changed, McSweeney remained – even early this year, former staff chief Sue Gray won a power struggle.
But now – because of the revelations of Peter Mandelson’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein and his subsequent dismissal – Downing Street Spinner faces his biggest test in his claims that Lord Mandelson was pushed for his appointment at first.
Mcsweeney’s reports that Grandee pushed to take office as the pressure grows this week – the claims that the Downing Street has pushed back.

Regardless, there are questions about whether Mcsweeney is the right man for work, former workers’ home secretary, David Blunkett, calls Sir Keir to “expand” the people around him.
Sir Keir and McSweeney, who first entered the download Street for the first time, said the thing to be seen in the reference, said that the labor leader should be gathered around.
Meanwhile, former TORY Foreign Minister Sir Malcolm Rifint, Times Radio’a “the prime minister is actually a suitable consultant for the future depending on what is actually,” he said.
The allegations about Mcsweeney abandoned Starmer as a rope walking. On the one hand, facing questions about his judgment, so keeping Mcsweeney on duty can create more problems for the Prime Minister if the claims do not disappear.
However, on the other hand, Prime Minister saw the turnover turnover in the Downing Street, and tried to “reset the narrative over and over again (and failed) – to get rid of someone who is so effective in party leadership, can serve to make things worse.
Mcsweeney, the prime minister was so closely intertwined that it will emerge more, deeply disturbing questions about Sir Keir’s judiciary.
The dismissal of any task comes after both Angela Rayner and Peter Mandelson’s loss within two weeks. Optical is far from ideal.

For this reason, the Prime Minister is likely to throw Mcsweeney’s weight on Friday morning, and his spokesman insists, “Of course he trusts the Prime Minister’s best team.”
However, the Prime Minister will not insist for the first time that his team will fully confidence in a member before they dismiss them the next day. After the loss of Mandelson and Rayner, who had the confidence of the PM before they made their exit, it wouldn’t be the first time this month.
Supporting Mcsweeney says very little about what might happen for the Prime Minister’s team.
But there is a certain thing: the removal of Downing Street Spinner would ask more questions than he answered for the Prime Minister.