PPE Medpro was set up by a consortium led by Baroness Mone’s husband, Doug Barrowman. It was awarded a government contract to supply PPE after being recommended by Baroness Mone.
Since the court judgement, the baroness has faced cross-party calls for her to be stripped of her peerage. However, peerages can only be removed by an act of Parliament.
In the letter, seen by the BBC, Baroness Mone demanded Sir Keir Starmer order an “urgent, independent investigation into whether ministers or officials have improperly influenced the NCA [National Crime Agency], CPS [Crown Prosecution Service] and civil litigation process”.
She also insisted the chancellor retract her comments.
Baroness Mone told Sir Keir: “I feel compelled to alert you to the dangerous and inflammatory statement made by your Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves.”
She said the word vendetta referred to “vengeance, feud and blood feud” and that Reeves’ comments had made Baroness Mone and her family feel unsafe.
She also said her social media had “gone into meltdown with threats and abuse”, adding “we need only look at the tragedies of Jo Cox and Sir David Amess to understand the dangers of such reckless language,” she said.
Jo Cox was the Labour MP for Batley and Spen and was killed in 2016.
Sir David Amess was the Conservative MP for Southend West when he was fatally stabbed in 2021.
Concluding her letter, Ms Mone said: “Prime Minister, I ask you directly: do you stand by your chancellor’s assertion that the government has a vendetta against me? Or will you act decisively to end this campaign, protect my safety, and restore integrity to government?
Failure to take urgent action will leave me with no choice but to pursue all available legal remedies, including defamation, harassment, and misfeasance claims, while also taking steps to ensure my personal safety and that of my family.”
