Treasury Enlists Blair Think Tank to Advise on AI Integration in Public Services
The Guardian
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- Date Published
- 25 Feb 2026
- Priority Score
- 3
- Australian
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- 25 Feb 2026, 07:15 pm
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Unimpressed tech equity campaigners compare move to ‘inviting in foxes to consult on the future of the henhouse’
Summary
The UK Treasury has engaged the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, alongside major tech companies, to strategize the implementation of AI within government services. This collaboration aims to bolster efficiency and productivity through AI. However, concerns have been raised by campaign groups about potential conflicts of interest due to the involvement of large tech firms in decision-making processes. This development aligns with the UK's ambition to lead in AI adoption within the G7, but also highlights issues related to AI governance and the ethics of public-private sector cooperation. The involvement of high-profile tech companies and experts signifies a substantial intersection of AI capability advancement and governance, with implications for public oversight and transparency.
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Tony Blair pictured this month. The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change has been asked to advise the government on injecting AI into the public sector. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/APView image in fullscreenTony Blair pictured this month. The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change has been asked to advise the government on injecting AI into the public sector. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/APTreasury calls in Blair thinktank to advise on using AI across public servicesUnimpressed tech equity campaigners compare move to ‘inviting in foxes to consult on the future of the henhouse’Ministers have called in Tony Blair’s thinktank and private tech companies to guide them on deploying AI across the UK government in a move campaigners compared to “inviting in foxes to consult on the future of the henhouse”.James Murray, chief secretary to the Treasury, chaired a meeting on Wednesday with the director of AI at the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change (TBI), the chair of IBM and senior executives at AI companies including Faculty AI, now part of Accenture, and Dex Hunter-Torricke, a former communications adviser at Google, Facebook and Elon Musk’s SpaceX.“These people are exactly who can help us create change across the public sector – giving us the hard truths on our approach to AI and advising where we need to prioritise our investment to support real efficiencies,” said Murray, who added that their advice will “feed into efficiency processes ahead of the next spending review”.The move came after the technology secretary, Liz Kendall, last month said the government’s goal was to “make Britain the fastest AI adoption country in the G7”.The Treasury said it showed it was committing “to private sector engagement on the deployment of artificial intelligence across the public sector so it can improve efficiency and productivity”.But Foxglove, the tech equity campaign group, said the Treasury meeting was “yet more evidence of the government’s excessively cosy relationship with Big Tech”.“Giving tech giants privileged access to decision-making around buying the very products they supply is clearly a risk,” said Donald Campbell, director of advocacy.Facial recognition error prompts police to arrest Asian man for burglary 100 miles awayRead more“It’s hard to understand how ministers seem to be unable to spot a potential conflict of interest which is blindingly obvious to everyone else.”Ministers were expected to hear criticism of the way the government has procured AI and related technology, the absence of the highest calibre talent in Whitehall to steer the implementation of AI and its failure to turn pilots into large-scale projects.The government has signed memorandums of understanding with AI firms OpenAI, Anthropic and GoogleDeepMind, accepted $1m (£730,000) from Meta to fund experts to “develop cutting-edge AI solutions … support national security and defence teams” and has contracts in health, defence and policing with Palantir.This week the deputy prime minister, David Lammy, announced at a Microsoft event in London plans to “dramatically expand the use of AI throughout the court system”.Laura Gilbert, a former senior Downing Street AI and data science adviser who now leads on AI for TBI, was due to be among the speakers on Wednesday.TBI has been funded with more than £250m given and pledged by the Ellison Foundation, an organisation in the name of the Oracle founder Larry Ellison.Explore more on these topicsAI (artificial intelligence)ComputingPublic services policyPalantirnewsShareReuse this content