This week, former President Donald Trump sat down with the titans of artificial intelligence. In a closed-door meeting, he rubbed shoulders with Sam Altman, Sundar Pichai, and others who hold the keys to our algorithmic future. The optics were predictable: a political showman courting the architects of the machine age. But across the Atlantic, a more profound question emerges. The UK stands at a precipice. We must decide whether our digital destiny is written in California or crafted in Britain.
The meeting itself was a masterclass in political theatre. Trump, ever the transactional negotiator, likely sought commitments to keep AI development within US borders. He understands what many European leaders miss: the raw power of owning the foundational technology of the 21st century. For Silicon Valley, it was a chance to hedge their bets, ensuring regulatory leniency no matter who wins the next election.
Yet the real story is not about one man’s dinner. It is about the sovereignty of data, the ethics of computation, and the quiet erosion of national autonomy that occurs every time we hand our digital infrastructure to a handful of American corporations. The UK, with its proud tradition of scientific innovation, must wake up.
Consider the stakes. Quantum computing is no longer a laboratory curiosity. In the next decade, quantum processors will crack encryption, simulate molecules, and redefine what is computationally possible. Who designs these machines? Who writes the algorithms? If it is not us, we become tenants in our own digital homes.
The user experience of society is at risk. Every login, every recommendation, every automated decision is an interaction with a system that reflects its creators’ values. When those creators exist in a monoculture of Silicon Valley, we all end up with apps that optimise for ad revenue over well-being, for engagement over truth. The Black Mirror warnings are not exaggerations. They are product roadmaps.
Digital sovereignty is not a pipe dream. It is the only path to a future where technology serves human flourishing rather than shareholder value. The UK already has the building blocks. Our universities produce world-class AI researchers. Our financial sector is a global leader in fintech. Our legal system has the sophistication to craft smart governance.
But we lack ambition. We treat AI as a service to import rather than a capability to build. The Government’s recent White Paper on AI regulation was a start, but it feels like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. We need a national AI strategy that invests in domestic compute infrastructure, funds ethical AI research, and creates a regulatory sandbox where British startups can challenge the giants.
Trump’s meeting is a reminder that the US will protect its own interests. The EU is forging ahead with the AI Act, a bold framework for trustworthy AI. The UK cannot afford to be a bystander. We must chart our own course, one that balances innovation with democratic accountability.
The time for action is now. Every day we delay, another data centre is planned without British input. Another algorithm is trained on our data without our consent. Another quantum breakthrough is patented in Palo Alto.
Let Trump hobnob with the tech elite. The UK’s task is more important: to build an AI ecosystem that is open, ethical, and sovereign. Our digital future must be made in Britain.








