A former Oxford roommate of Keir Starmer describes the British Prime Minister as an apolitical ‘blank slate’ who fabricated a working-class image from an early age. Now, with ties to intelligence agencies, the Trilateral Commission, and a cabinet stacked with associates of sexual predators, Starmer represents not just the most unpopular leader in British history, but a highly compromised figure.

This week, I was contacted by a former roommate of the British Prime Minister. In the lead up to the 2024 general election, Starmer was lauded by the mainstream media as ‘the Labour Party in human form’ who could ‘chair a meeting…draft a minute…[and] lead a team’, but my source claims that Starmer was actually an apolitical ‘blank slate’ utilised to buttress and entrench the ruling class. After our conversation, I believe that Starmer could be not only the most unpopular Prime Minister the country has ever had, but also highly compromised.

Benjamin Schoendorff lived with Keir Starmer in London in 1987 after meeting him at Oxford University the previous year. He claims that the dishonesty and fabricated image Starmer has become known and even ridiculed for (particularly in the case of his constant refrain: ‘my father was a toolmaker’) was prevalent from an early age: ‘He was sporting a Northern accent (though originally from Surrey) and presented himself as this laddish “workerist”.’ At Oxford, he claims, Starmer was readily willing to join and volunteer his time for ‘relatively small, left-wing political groups…without any need to argue any point of theory’, but when they moved in together in London the following year, Schoendorff said that he found the future Prime Minister to be ‘zero political’ and only interested in ‘football, Viz magazine, comedy clubs, and occasional clubbing’.

In light of Starmer’s later Damascene conversion from a lefty student to an authoritarian leader who strived to purge the Labour Party of all remnants of Corbynism, Schoendorff believes that something does not add up. He told me that back in Oxford, he had found it ‘surprisingly easy’ to recruit Starmer to his own Trotskyist group, which was ‘credibly rumoured to be financed by [Libyan leader] Gaddafi’. He added: ‘I did not notice anything “off” about Keir at the time, but recent weeks make me think my most conspiratorial suspicions might not be off.’

Schoendorff explained that ‘undercover police officers were around Keir from a young age’. He said: ‘The Spycop inquiry revealed that there was an undercover officer in every organisation at that time, so now we have to ask: who was ours?’ Admitting that he has not been in touch with Starmer for some time now, Schoendorff asks: ‘How does one become such a total and absolute liar in their mature years if there was not something already there earlier?’

Starmer’s former roommate told me that he thinks a link between Starmer and the British intelligence link could be an explanation for “how devoid of all political spine and analysis he is’. ‘But,’ he added, ‘others think he was “turned” later, when he joined the Trilateral Commission.’

The Trilateral Commission was created in the 1970s by US billionaire David Rockefeller. Starmer is one of only two British MPs to have joined the commission whilst in office. The other is Rory Stewart, a former Conservative government minister and, reportedly, MI6 agent.

In 2019, whilst Stewart was running for leadership of the Conservative Party following the fall of Theresa May (which has been revealed in the latest tranche of the Epstein Files to have been engineered by Steve Bannon, Boris Johnson, and Nigel Farage), a source from within the British civil service stated that Mr Stewart had been recruited by MI6 as a graduate and then worked as an intelligence agent for seven years before entering Parliament. When asked directly, Stewart said: ‘It’s the Secret Intelligence Service, bound by the Official Secrets Act. So even if you found someone who was an intelligence officer, they wouldn’t tell you they were an intelligence officer.’

Despite denials of his own involvement, we know that Stewart’s father had previously been second-in-command at MI6, serving as Assistant Chief from 1974 to 1979. But Starmer has his own associations with British intelligence agencies. As head of the Crown Prosecution Service, Starmer met for ‘drinks’ with Jonathan Evans, then head of MI5. This was not official business, but rather was detailed as a social meeting. Although the CPS operates as an independent body, Starmer’s drinks were paid for by MI5. According to a report by Declassified UK, there is no record of a Director of Public Prosecutions before or after Starmer meeting with a MI5 chief.

Evans had previously expressed his ‘delight’ with Starmer’s calls as DPP. In 2010, Starmer decided that there was ‘insufficient evidence’ against an MI5 officer referred to only as ‘witness B’, and in 2012 he turned down another similar case against MI6 for their role in CIA torture. This was despite ‘MI5 telegrams to the CIA [showing that] security service officers fed the US with information’ on British citizens being tortured. Evans had every reason to be pleased with Starmer, for the CPS had been tasked with finding out not only if British intelligence officers had been complicit in torture, but who had given them their orders, looking further up MI5’s ‘chain of command’ and considering criminal charges. Starmer had ensured that no such charges were pursued. In June 2024, after Starmer had emphasised his disavowment of Corbynism by declaring Labour the ‘party of national security’, he was further praised by David Omand, a former head of the GCHQ spy agency.

Rockefeller’s vision was for the Trilateral Commission to deal with an ‘excess of democracy’. Keir Starmer joined whilst serving as shadow Brexit secretary under Jeremy Corbyn, but did not inform the then Labour leader. Jeffrey Epstein and Peter Mandelson were also members.

This was not the only time Starmer kept Corbyn in the dark about his extra-parliamentary affairs. Starmer earned tens of thousands from Mishcon De Reya, a law firm which has previously represented war criminal Ariel Sharon and the Israeli embassy in London. Starmer had accepted jobs with the firm both before and after becoming an MP, and leaked messages from 2017 showed that he had planned to take a consulting position before being blocked by Corbyn.

The Trilateral Commission also includes Blackrock CEO Larry Fink, who has been wooed by several members of the Starmer administration, including Rachel Reeves and Angela Rayner. Palantir, another US giant, has won multi-million government contracts without competitive tender. Under the Starmer-McSweeney administration, it seems, the dreaded ‘excess of democracy’ has been comprehensively obliterated.

Schoendorff claims that Starmer is ‘not leading anything’. But since the fall of key allies Morgan McSweeney and Peter Mandelson, Starmer seems to be attempting to reassert his position with two new appointments: Antonia Romeo as Cabinet Secretary, and Margaret Hodge at OFCOM.

Romeo met with Palantir’s UK director Louis Mosley in April 2019. She subsequently introduced him to David Prior, the chair of NHS England. A year later, in the midst of the Coronavirus pandemic, the NHS announced that Palantir would be ‘part of the country’s response’, issuing an ’emergency contract’.

Romeo has been accused of bullying behaviour whilst working as a diplomat in New York. One former colleague said: ‘The many people she bullied and intimidated, most of them women, will now feel failed for a second time.’

Schoendorff explained: ‘Keir has this ability to not have any conviction.’ Whilst in New York, Starmer’s new pick for Cabinet Secretary, the most senior civil servant in the country, was also photographed smiling alongside serial rapist Harvey Weinstein.

Of course, this is not the first time Starmer has promoted the associates of sexual predators. Peter Mandelson, the ‘best pal’ of notorious paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, was made US ambassador. Matthew Doyle, a former Director of Communications to Starmer who had campaigned for convicted paedophile Sean Morton, was given a life peerage.

Another Starmer pick, Margaret Hodge, is favourite to be appointed as the new head of OFCOM, where she would be responsible for regulating the country’s media, telecoms, and postal services. Hodge, an old friend of Peter Mandelson, would also be in charge of implementing the Online Safety Act.

In the 1980s, whilst head of Islington Council, Hodge dismissed and ignored claims of a paedophile ring operating in children’s homes under her watch. When one of the victims went public, Hodge was forced to apologise and pay £30,000 in damages. Unbelievably, she was later appointed as the Labour government’s Minister for Children.

Now, she will be in charge of what you can see online.

Morgan McSweeney’s 2008-10 campaign to get Hodge re-elected as a Labour MP in Barking and Dagenham was supported by an organisation called Hope not Hate. In 2022, Hope not Hate’s Political Adviser Liron Velleman gave evidence at the committee stage of the Online Safety Bill. He is now a convicted paedophile.

Starmer is battling to survive the fallout from his appointment of Epstein-informant Peter Mandelson as US Ambassador. Starmer made Kevan Jones a Labour peer and then appointed him to the Intelligence and Security Committee. Now, Lord Beamish will decide which Mandelson files are released.

The British Prime Minister is a danger to the country, but he does not have long left in power.


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