SNL UK mocks Keir Starmer over Mandelson appointment and āfake farmerā Jeremy Clarkson in brutal sketch
SNL UK mocks Keir Starmer over Mandelson appointment and āfake farmerā Jeremy Clarkson in brutal sketch
Lauren MorrisSun, April 26, 2026 at 10:46 AM UTC
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Saturday Night Live UK didnāt pull any political punches as it returned from its weekend off last night ā mocking Sir Keir Starmerās appointment of Peter Mandelson as British ambassador to the U.S.
It comes after The Independent revealed last week that Mandelson had failed the vetting process before being given the role, with the prime minister insisting that he and his ministers were not aware of this until recently. Mandelson was sacked months after his appointment over his links to Jeffrey Epstein and is currently facing a police inquiry over claims that he leaked sensitive government documents to the child sex offender while in his role as business secretary.
In light of the recent Starmer drama, Saturday Night Live UKās show on Saturday (25 April) opened with a parody of ITVās Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, renaming it to Who Wants To Remain A Millionaire with the prime minister becoming a contestant.
Al Nash played the role of former Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson, who wasnāt spared by the showās comedy writers.
George Fouracres and Larry Dean as Sir Keir Starmer and Peter Mandelson (Sky)
āIām your host, fake farmer and real arsehole Jeremy Clarkson,ā he said. āLetās bring out our contestant for the night. You hate him, I hate him ā itās prime minister Keir Starmer.ā
George Fouracres reprised his role as Starmer from previous episodes, with his bumbling caricature of the prime minister being asked the question, āis it ever a good idea to give Peter Mandelson a job?ā Reading out the multiple choice answers, Clarkson said: āA. No. B. Of Course Not. C. Not In A Million Years. D. Yes.ā
āItās a tricky one, Jeremy,ā Starmer replied. āI think Iām going to have to use a lifeline on this one, Iāll ask the audience.ā
While the results were overwhelming in favour of C, Starmer asked to use the 50-50 lifeline and when that left just C and D, he chose to phone a friend ā Peter Mandelson, described as a āpaedophile-adjacent Bond villainā by Nashās Clarkson.
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SNL UK star Larry Dean played the role of Mandelson, who was shown in a white robe bearing the initials āJ.Rā ā referencing the photographs of Mandelson found in the Epstein files of him in the same attire while in the paedophileās company.
Al Nash as Jeremy Clarkson (Sky)
Starmer asked Mandelson whether itās ever a good idea to give him a job, with Mandelson responding: āMe? A job? Iād be careful if I were you,ā before laughing villainously as the lighting turned red.
Despite being given the chance to use the 50:50 lifeline again and being left with C, Starmer said: āI know itās not conventional but Iād actually like to bring back one of the previous options because Iām going to go with D ā final answer.ā
When asked whether heās sure, Starmer said: āOh, never.ā Unsurprisingly, itās revealed to be the wrong answer, with Starmer telling Clarkson: āJeremy, itās clear to me now that that was the wrong decision. Would I make the same decision again, knowing what I know now? Quite possibly.ā
The Independent has reached out to the Cabinet Office, Peter Mandelson and Jeremy Clarkson for comment.
The clip has found fans on social media, with one viewer writing on X: āgeorge fouracres is a better keir starmer than keir starmer is.ā
While another tweeted: āstarmerās even getting rinsed on tv now. when the jokes write themselves, you know the governmentās a mess.ā
The show poked fun at the story later on in the show, with Weekend Update co-host Paddy Young saying: āAs a result of the Mandelson fallout, civil servant Olly Robbins has been sacked. No! Not Olly Robins! Sir Oliver Robins, Permanent Under-Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs in the United Kingdom! Whoās that?ā
Earlier in April, Starmer sacked Robbins for failing to tell him that Mandelson had failed vetting for the role of ambassador to the US. Starmer stood by his decision to fire him this week, saying that the former Foreign Office chief only faced the āeveryday pressure of Governmentā during the vetting process.
Source: āAOL Breakingā