In a move that signals the escalating geopolitical stakes of artificial intelligence, Donald Trump is set to convene a high-stakes meeting with the titans of the AI world. The former president, now a dominant force in the Republican primaries, has extended invitations to the chief executives of OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and Anthropic, among others. The agenda is as opaque as a black-box neural network, but the subtext is clear: whoever controls the algorithms, controls the next century. And the UK, through its tech envoy, is demanding that British firms are not left out of the conversation.
This is not a mere diplomatic dinner. It is a recognition that AI policy is being forged in the boardrooms of Silicon Valley, not the halls of Westminster or the European Commission. The UK’s tech envoy, a position created in the wake of the AI Safety Summit at Bletchley Park, has been vocal about the need for British companies to have a seat at the table. “We cannot afford to be spectators in this revolution,” he said in a briefing earlier today. “British AI research is world-class, but we need the commercial and regulatory frameworks to translate that into global leadership.”
The meeting itself is cloaked in the kind of ambiguity that Trump has perfected. Will it be a policy discussion, a fundraising opportunity, or a performance for the cameras? Probably all three. But the underlying question is existential: how do democracies align the incentives of private corporations with the public good? The UK, with its National AI Strategy and a regulatory approach that calls itself “pro-innovation” while still demanding safety, is trying to navigate this tightrope.
Yet the irony is palpable. The UK, which has invested billions into AI research and hosts DeepMind, the birthplace of AlphaGo, is now having to plead for a place at a table that, by all rights, it helped build. The tech envoy’s demand is as much a symptom of anxiety as it is a strategic move. Britain’s post-Brexit identity as a “global Britain” relies on being an AI superpower. But superpowers do not ask for seats; they command them.
And what of the other players? The European Union is forging ahead with its AI Act, a framework of rules and red tape that could either protect citizens or stifle innovation, depending on your bias. China, meanwhile, has its own AI ambitions, unencumbered by the same ethical hand-wringing. The US and UK are tied by intelligence sharing and cultural affinity, but in the race for dominance, every nation is an island.
The ‘Black Mirror’ shadow looms large here. Every algorithm has a consequence, every optimisation a trade-off. The meeting between Trump and AI leaders could produce a manifesto for responsible AI, or it could simply be a photo opportunity for a candidate who has shown little interest in the nuances of digital sovereignty. The UK’s demand for a seat is a plea for a place in the narrative, but it also highlights a deeper fragmentation. AI does not respect borders, but the power to shape its future is still very much national.
What will come of this meeting? Perhaps a joint statement on AI safety. Perhaps a commitment to open research. Or perhaps nothing more than a reminder that in the age of AI, the most valuable resource is not data or compute, but access to the decision makers. The UK knows this, which is why its envoy is making noises. But noise is not influence. And in the silent hum of data centres, influence is everything.











