Finally got him to go': how Epstein was given an inside track on UK's political future
Briefly

Finally got him to go': how Epstein was given an inside track on UK's political future
"Those included further wild swings in the value of the British pound, which had already been volatile in the lead-up to the 6 May general election. It fell 2.2% on the day of the vote, its worst day in over a year, illustrating how concerned traders were about the risk of a hung parliament and political instability. On the day of Mandelson's apparent tip-off to Epstein, the pound rose by more than two cents to $1.505,"
"before losing all its gains as Brown's resignation and his plan for Labour to hold coalition talks with Clegg's Liberal Democrats sent shock waves through Westminster. Sterling would gain back a cent a day later, as the Lib Dems struck a deal with the Tories, handing the keys of No 10 to the Conservative leader David Cameron."
Gordon Brown resigned as UK prime minister on a brisk Monday evening in May 2010 after a general election produced a hung parliament. Brown kept the decision to a tight inner circle; Nick Clegg was told only ten minutes before the public announcement. Jeffrey Epstein received a briefing hours earlier via an email believed to be from Peter Mandelson. The apparent tip-off coincided with volatile sterling moves: the pound fell 2.2% on election day, briefly rose to $1.505 on the day of the tip-off, fell again after the resignation announcement, then recovered as a Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition formed. No evidence shows anyone traded on the leaks.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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