Former minister Jess Phillips has said she âthreatened to resign on a number of occasionsâ over Lord Peter Mandelsonâs appointment as ambassador to the US.
Lord Mandelson was sacked from the role in September last year over his friendship with paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Ms Phillips, who resigned as safeguarding minister earlier this month in protest over prime minister Sir Keir Starmerâs leadership, said she was âhurt and upsetâ to learn of Lord Mandelsonâs initial appointment.
She told BBC Newsnight: âI had to decide whether me, like, shouting my mouth off to make myself feel better was the right thing to do, or if I could use that hurt anger to sweat the assets on violence against women and girls, to get basically half of what is written in the Violence Against Women and Girls Strategy actually written into it.
âNever waste a crisis is always my mantra with regards to Violence against Women and Girls Strategies, but privately, obviously I was horrified just like everybody else.â
Ms Phillips said she âmade demandsâ to stay in her role.
âI didnât just consider (resigning); I threatened to resign on a number of occasions and made demands to stop me from resigning,â she said.âItâs not really fair to say what me and Keir Starmer particularly spoke about. But usually, you speak to the people before him before you get to that point⊠at the point that he is talking to you, he is saying âOK, what do you need?â in regard to, in my case, violence against women and girls.
âBut I have to say I think I was probably one of the only people who actually did that.âOn Saturday, Ms Phillips said she felt âliberatedâ since resigning with a scathing letter accusing Sir Keir of failing to be âboldâ.
She accused him in her letter of failing to act fast enough on violence against women and girls, saying his âdesire not to have an argument means we rarely make an argument, leaving opportunities for progress stalled and delayedâ.
Elected in Birmingham Yardley in 2015, Ms Phillips has been a vocal campaigner against domestic and sexual violence throughout her time in Parliament.Her tenure as safeguarding minister attracted controversy, with the government finding itself at the centre of a row over its handling of an inquiry into grooming gangs last year.
The row saw five members of the inquiryâs victim liaison panel quit in protest against suggestions the probeâs scope could be widened and criticising Ms Phillips directly.