In a move that underscores the escalating global race for artificial intelligence supremacy, former US President Donald Trump has called a summit of top AI executives, including figures from OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and emerging hardware players. The meeting, scheduled for next month in New York, is billed as a strategy session to funnel private capital into American AI infrastructure, from data centres to chip manufacturing. For the United Kingdom, the signal is clear: without a similarly bold posture, we risk being left behind in the technology that will shape the next century.
The summons arrives amid a frantic period of AI investment, where nations are jockeying for a slice of a market expected to be worth over a trillion dollars by 2030. The US, with its deep venture capital pools and dominant tech giants, already leads. But Trump's intervention suggests a recognition that market forces alone may not secure long-term advantage. By directly courting AI leaders, he is promising a regulatory environment that favours fast deployment over caution, a stark contrast to the EU's risk-averse AI Act. The subtext is a warning to other nations: America will not cede the frontier.
For the UK, the implications are profound. Our AI sector, while vibrant, operates on a smaller scale. DeepMind, born in London, is now part of Google's global machine. Our strength lies in research, ethics, and a legal framework that balances innovation with public trust. But that nuance is not enough. To compete, we need a national AI strategy that goes beyond White Papers and into hard infrastructure. The government must incentivise domestic chip fabrication, create 'AI growth zones' with relaxed planning laws for data centres, and invest in quantum computing as a hedge against the limits of classical AI.
There is also a human element. The Trump summit will likely discuss workforce displacement, a problem the UK must address with urgency. We need a reskilling revolution, not just for tech workers but for the millions in logistics, law, and creative industries who will see their roles transformed. Without a social safety net that includes universal basic services and lifelong learning, we risk a backlash that could stall progress entirely.
Moreover, the UK's digital sovereignty hangs in the balance. If American AI becomes the default for everything from healthcare diagnostics to defence systems, we become a consumer rather than a shaper of the technology. We must champion open-source models, invest in domestic foundational models, and forge alliances with like-minded nations, such as Canada and Japan, to create a counterbalance to US and Chinese dominance.
The summit also raises ethical questions. Trump's deregulatory approach could accelerate innovation but at the cost of oversight. The UK should not emulate that recklessly. Our strength is our ability to build AI that is transparent, accountable, and aligned with human values. We can be the 'good actor' in the global stage, but only if we move fast enough to have a seat at the table when standards are set.
Ultimately, the Trump summons is a wake-up call. The AI race is not a sprint but a marathon where early leaders can lock in advantages through network effects and data moats. The UK must decide whether we are a front-runner or a follower. We have the talent, the institutions, and the cultural capital to compete. What we lack is the urgency and the investment. The time to act is now, before the window closes and the future is written elsewhere.










