No 10 says it's working to reform 'both vetting and appointment processes'published at 14:06 GMT
Since PMQs, Keir Starmer's spokesperson has been answering reporters' questions in Westminster.
There's no "established precedent for withdrawing a peerage nomination" after it's been announced, the spokesperson says, following a Commons session filled with criticism of Starmer's appointment of Lord Doyle.
This is why Downing Street is "undertaking wider reform to both vetting and appointment processes", they add.
As we've been reporting, Doyle, Starmer's former director of communications, was suspended on Tuesday from Labour's parliamentary party over his links with convicted sex offender Sean Morton.
- In our last post, the BBC's Henry Zeffman looks at the timeframe of when reporting began on Doyle's links to Morton and when the former took up his peerage. Read that here.







