Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer will not face a formal parliamentary inquiry into claims he misled MPs regarding the appointment of Lord Mandelson as US ambassador.
A Conservative motion for an inquiry fell in the House of Commons yesterday by 335 votes to 223.
It's an issue that caused some division, with a number of Labour MPs saying Starmer should have referred himself to the Privileges Committee, however the majority voted against the motion.
The PM strenuously denied allegations he misled MPs over whether vetting for the role of US ambassador followed "full due process" and was adamant that "no pressure whatsoever" was applied to officials at the Foreign Office.
The Tory motion, tabled by leader Kemi Badenoch, sought to have Starmer's comments examined by a committee to determine if the Prime Minister had broken parliamentary rules by knowingly misleading parliament.
Such a breach, according to the Ministerial Code, would result in the culprit being expected to resign.
The BBC reports 14 Labour MPs voted in favour of an inquiry, ignoring instructions from No.10 to oppose the motion.
The Lib Dems, SNP, Greens, DUP, Plaid Cymru, Reform and nine independent MPs voted in favour of the motion.
A total of 53 Labour MPs did not have a vote recorded.