The great British public has had enough. The trilling, whirring invasion of delivery robots on our pavements is provoking a backlash that has reached the ears of Whitehall. Regulators are now reviewing safety protocols after a series of incidents left pedestrians bruised and angry.
Sources in the Department for Transport confirm that the Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles is under pressure to act. The robots, deployed by Starship Technologies and others, have been spotted mounting kerbs, blocking wheelchair ramps, and even colliding with prams. One MP told me: "It's a menace. The robots have no manners."
The backlash is not just anecdotal. Councils in Milton Keynes and Northampton have reported a spike in complaints. The robots were supposed to be the future of local delivery. Now they are a political liability. Ministers are wary. The technology is popular with investors. But voters are angry.
Inside Westminster, the mood is shifting. The Transport Select Committee is considering an inquiry. 'We need to know who is liable when a robot hits a child,' a senior Labour source said. The government is caught. It wants to be seen as pro-innovation. But it cannot ignore a grassroots revolt.
The review will focus on three areas. Speed limits. Right of way rules. And a new code of conduct for operators. But the real question is enforcement. Who polices the robots? The police say it's a council matter. Councils say they lack resources. The result is a vacuum.
A spokesman for Starship Technologies said: "Safety is our priority. We are working with regulators." That line is wearing thin. In the Lobby, the whispers are that tougher rules are coming. The question is how tough.
The robots have become a symbol. A symptom of a disconnect between tech-fuelled innovation and the reality of British streets. For now, the machines keep rolling. But the political tide is turning. This is a story to watch.








