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Killing populism: What Australia has to teach Britain

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Your first, worst thought about Australian politics is that it is extremely similar to British politics. This seems obviously true at first and then increasingly profoundly untrue the more you get to know the place.

The similarities are immediately obvious. Australia has an uncharismatic centre-left prime minister who enjoys a huge majority but seemingly has no idea what to do with it. There’s a shattered centre-right opposition, crammed full of morons, in a state of advanced ideological disarray. There’s a resurgent far-right threatening on the wings. Hell, I walked around the New South Wales parliament and it looked like a mini-Commons in nearly every respect, except for the fact that it was cleaner and better maintained.

But once you get past these surface details, Australia and Britain seem to live in separate universes. If Australia feels like Britain at all, it feels like Britain around 2007, before the financial crash and austerity, before Brexit and Liz Truss. It’s not perfect. There’s poverty and ignorance, obviously. House prices are too high, young people are frozen out, and that issue could easily become connected to immigration rates in a viable populist attack. The asylum system is brutal and unkind. But on a fundamental level, Australia has just about managed to maintain the core promise of political life in a Western democracy: that things will be better for your kids than they were for you. In the UK, we have not.

You know what really feels different? It’s boring. Australian politics is beautifully, exquisitely, delightfully boring. It is boring in the way it used to be back home - sane, predictable, restrained, broadly rational, and consisting mostly of retail offers to voters rather than screeching rhetoric about identity and culture war. If I worked here, I would have a less interesting career and I mean that in the best possible way. The success of pundits and bloggers is inversely proportionate to the wellbeing of a society. If they’re having a good and interesting time it generally means everyone else is getting fucked.

Australia, almost alone among Western countries, has not really given populism room to breath. In the general election last year, a salivating imbecile of a man named Peter Dutton used his position as leader of the centre-right Liberal party to try and bring MAGA-style politics to Australia. In response, Australia handed him his arse. His party experienced a landslide defeat. He lost his seat. Populism was repudiated.

Why is this happening? Is it because Australians are somehow more politically evolved than Brits, Europeans and Americans? No. Is it because they are immune to racist or anti-immigrant rhetoric? Absolutely not. They love that filthy shit just as much as we do. It’s because the rules governing the electoral system have created a different set of incentives, which then provide for different outcomes.

They have created a system that values nuanced preferences rather than black-and-white winner-takes-all victory. It rewards politicians who reach out to the centre, rather than towards their base. It makes sure the views of everyone in society are heard and represented through policy. And it does all this through small, moderate changes to the electoral system.

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Instead of the British system of first-past-the-post, Australia uses preferential voting. In Britain, we put a cross by the candidate we support and the candidate with the most votes wins. In Australia, they rank the candidates in order. Instead of just voting Labour, say, you’d vote Labour first, Greens second, Lib Dems third, Conservatives fourth and Reform fifth.

The winning candidate in a seat must secure a majority of the votes. Initially you count the first preference votes - the people who put that candidate first. Then you start redistributing votes for second preferences - people’s second best option - until a candidate gets over 50% support, at which point they’re declared the winner.

The most beautiful thing about this system is the notion of preference. In Britain, we choose a winner. This is extremely primitive - most people’s political wishes are more complex than that. But it also mutilates democratic thought. Instead of voting for who we most want to win, we are often forced to vote tactically for whoever we think is best placed to defeat the party we most want to stop. We’re forced into a game of Battleships, trying to figure out who is best placed to defeat Reform, or the Conservatives, or whoever else we’ve taken a dislike to.

In Australia, they simply describe their preferences. Very often, that will involve people giving their first preference idealistically to the party they most like and their second preference pragmatically to the adjacent ideological party most likely to win. It forces people to think about different versions of goodness, rather than black-and-white assertions of party support. It allows them to think both optimistically and practically, which is a winning combination of instincts.

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Just like the UK, Australia is experiencing a long-term decline in the two-party system. In 1983, Labor won under Bob Hawke with 49.5% of the vote with just 6.9% of people voting for third parties. In 2025, Labor won with 34.6% of the vote, with 33.6% of people voting for third parties. Like Britain, Australia is also experiencing a two-bloc ideological divide between progressive voters on the one hand, who are typically university educated and living in big multicultural urban areas, and reactionary voters on the other, who are typically school educated and living in towns and rural areas.

In Britain, this change is sabotaging any sense of meaning in our democracy. We are utterly exposed to arbitrary, meaningless election results which do not represent the popular will in any meaningful way.

Take the Gorton and Denton byelection last month. As it happened, the Greens won, taking 40% of the vote to Reform’s 29% and Labour’s 25%. That’s what happened in that particular seat, but there will be plenty of seats at the next election where the demographics and the preferences will be slightly different. You could get a lot of results that look like this: Greens 30%, Labour 30%, Reform 35%. That is an insane result. It provides a Reform victory in a seat that is overwhelmingly progressive. It is an abuse of any sense of logic or democracy that this should be the case, but that is the kind of deformed outcome you get in a post-two-party system that still uses first-past-the-post.

Preferential voting acts decisively against that problem, because the Green voter would make Labour second preference and the Labour voter would make the Greens second preference. This allows voters to opt for their preference without giving up a stake in the question of who ultimately wins. It allows them to state their desires while still preventing their worst outcome.

The British system punishes diversity of thought within an ideological camp. It rewards whoever can monopolise the vote on their side of the great tribal divide. Margaret Thatcher managed this in the 80s, monopolising the right while the left split into Labour and the SDP. Keir Starmer managed this in 2024, monopolising the progressive vote while the reactionary bloc splintered into the Tories and Reform. The Australian system recognises diversity of thought within an ideological camp and makes elections about popular will rather than the delivery of an effective monopolisation programme.

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Most importantly, it discourages movement towards the extreme and rewards movement towards the centre. Imagine that you are a candidate in an Australian election. You want to get first preference votes by speaking to your core supporters, sure. But then there is a secondary consideration. You also want to pick up second preference votes. And that means saying and behaving in a way that will appeal to voters who prefer other parties, making yourself palatable to them.

This doesn’t always work. The centre-right Liberal party in Australia, for instance, is going through a period of hysterical discombobulation. It is making the exact same mistake the Tories are making and fixating on voters lost to the right while ignoring the much more serious problem it has of voters it is losing to its left. It no longer possesses a single parliamentary seat with an expansive view of Sydney Harbour - a testament to how badly it has fumbled its support among Australia’s wealthy cosmopolitan voters.

But there is no electoral system which can solve the capacity for foolishness and self-harm in the modern conservative mind. There is no force on earth so powerful it can make stupid people recognise objective truth. All we can do is combine incentives with desired behaviour and hope that most people, most of the time, will act accordingly.

The system has ultimately worked very well. When the Australian centre-right party failed to recognise this incentive, others arrived to take advantage, as if by strength of market forces. In the 2022 election, 16 seats were won by candidates who did not win on first preference vote. Every single one of them had a Liberal party victory on first preference, but second preference votes saw them lose their seat in favour of seven Labor victors, two Greens, and seven independents. All but one of these independents were so-called Teal candidates - fiscally conservative, socially liberal centrist types alienated by the small-minded stubbornness of the mainstream right.

This was a decisive moment in the election. It’s hard to compare results under one electoral system with another because people’s behavior is different, but - you know - fuck it, let’s just play around with numbers for a laugh. Under first-past-the-post, that election would have made the centre-right the largest group in a hung parliament, with 73 seats, versus 71 for Labor and seven for independents. But under preferential voting, it translated to 77 seats for Labor, 58 for the centre-right and 16 for independents.

In the 2025 election, the new MAGA-style right-wing approach attacked woke and gender diversity and all that - you know the drill. It alienated urban moderate voters, particularly women and young people. And it got hammered, recording its lowest ever seat count and experiencing something close to liquidation in inner city and suburban Australia. The Teal independents held their ground.

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There is a second reason for the Australian victory over populism. It is mandatory voting.

I have always opposed mandatory voting. In general, my instinctive response to any form of coercion is: no thanks fuck you. That is probably the single most irreducible aspect of my political personality. Mandatory voting, obviously, involves a form of coercion by the state on the individual.

Australia is generally an extremely compliant nation. I am deeply alienated by it. Hardly anyone smokes here. They’ve basically banned vapes outside of a pharmacy setting and although you still see people vaping, you see it far less than at home. The rules around alcohol purchase and consumption are tighter than in the UK. This is a society which follows rules. People say the same of Britain, but there is a greater degree of savagery and chaos in the British personality, as you will see on any weekend evening in our towns and cities.

I went to a free gig in a park in Adelaide. No-one was visibly drunk, literally no-one smoked or vaped, there was plenty of personal space and at the end we all left in an orderly manner. In the UK, no-one would have gotten out of that place alive. I felt terribly alone. I longed for women wearing short skirts in winter vomiting on street corners, mad drunks screaming at passers-by, someone eating a kebab next to a dead body, the great Hogarthian beauty of my country.

Mandatory voting is in line with the general Australian instinct towards rules and compliance. My instinctive distaste therefore remains. But when you break it down into a series of losses and gains it becomes very hard to resist.

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In terms of state coercion, it is basically the same as jury service. Is there anything wrong with jury service? No. We therefore accept, as a liberal principle, that you can take away the freedom of the individual to not attend an event in order to maintain the civic health of a society. Mandatory voting asks for less time from the individual in exchange for a greater gain. There is also no real punishment for not voting. You get a $20 fine - a tenner basically. It doesn’t grow upon non-payment. It’s a token penalty without a meaningful civil implication.

I used to object to mandatory voting on the basis that people should be able to register their protests against all options by not voting. They shouldn’t be coerced into supporting one of the parties on offer, because they may not like any of them. But the mandatory element is not actually for the voting. It is to attend the polling station. What you do inside the polling booth is up to you. You can draw a cock on the ballot - this is naturally an option many people take - or leave it blank, or scribble over it. You still have the ability to spoil your ballot and register a protest.

The liberal consequences of mandatory voting are therefore pretty insignificant. But the liberal advantages of it are extensive.

In the UK, elections are won by targeting your vote and getting them out on polling day. Parties have detailed databases of who lives where, whether they’ve voted for them in the past and whether they’re likely to do so today. They target that vote and target that vote and target that vote. It is a remorseless professional campaign - a numbers game. We barely question this but of course it is completely irrelevant to any higher notion of what democracy is for.

In Australia you simply cannot win by targeting your core vote. This entire element of the electoral game has ceased to function, because turnout is around 90%. The base mobilisation approach is neutralised.

Instead, you have to stretch out your vote. You have to target voters who don’t care that much, who aren’t really that bothered, who have no pre-existing ideological disposition. Political incentives point towards broad inclusive messaging rather than targeted core-vote strategies.

Mandatory voting also brings in young voters. Australia gets between 90% to 95% turnout in each age group, including the young. And because they vote young, they get into the habit and keep doing it as they get older.

In the UK, we have a severe problem of variable voting levels by age group. Older voters are very likely to vote. Younger voters are much less likely. That’s why the last election saw the Tories promise to maintain the triple-lock pension for the old and reintroduce conscription for the young. It’s a basic question of incentives. In Australia, you are forcing that youth vote to be heard. By virtue of that, you are compelling the political system to respond to the full spectrum of societal demands.

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There are surely other reasons why Australia has proved surprisingly immune to populist seduction - economic, psychological, cultural, whatever. But the incentives built into the electoral system must surely have a decisive role.

Why don’t we hear more about these Australian ideas in Britain? I suspect it’s because Australia, like the US, is right-wing coded. It speaks English, it is considered tainted by colonialism, it is the originator of many of the worst anti-immigrant policies implemented internationally, and it is the birthplace of many of the most morally decrepit conservative voices in the UK, from Rupert Murdoch to Lynton Crosby. It is the kind of country which right-wingers like to refer to and progressives do not.

This is why we hear about the ‘Australian points-based system’ on immigration but not about their electoral model. If a Scandinavian country had trialled preferential mandatory voting, I think we would hear more British liberals celebrate it.

Defeating populism is the great mission of our time. Australia has proved very good at it. We should be paying much greater attention to what they’re up to.

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Odds and sods

This newsletter is available as a podcast - on Spotify, Substack or at the top of the page.

My piece for the i paper this week celebrated Starmer’s approach to the Iran war and thanked our lucky stars he was prime minister when it mattered.

This week I watched a lot of extremely middling films on airplanes while trying to get home. Materialists is a film which thinks it is idealistic, but is in fact astonishingly cynical. The Running Man has good politics but a poor script, weirdly underpowered direction and a flat leading man. But I had great fun watching Final Destination: Bloodlines. I laughed my head off at every death and in fact found it even more funny when the man in the seat next to me turned to look at what I was laughing at, saw someone’s head being ground up in a lawnmower, and then shifted visibly away from me.

I am now finally back in the UK and enjoying every raindrop, and every filthy stinking chaotic corner of London. See you next week you cunts.

Striking 13 is free, for anyone, forever. If you can afford it, become a paid subscriber to keep it free for those who cannot.

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Trump is being schooled on the limits of US power – but he is a slow learner | Rafael Behr

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Last year it was China’s answer to tariffs, now it’s Iran’s retaliation to airstrikes – ‘America First’ keeps foundering on global economics

Donald Trump is teaching the world a lesson, but not the one he thinks. The attack on Iran was meant to be a dazzling display of military supremacy. It has instead illuminated chinks in the US’s armour.

The US president’s formidable arsenal cannot summon up an insurrection from Iran’s tyrannised and leaderless opposition. It cannot force merchant ships to run a gauntlet of missile and drone attacks in the strait of Hormuz. The government in Tehran and the facts of geography that give it leverage over global trade are unchanged. Trump’s exasperation is showing. He urges tanker crews to “show some guts” by sailing into harm’s way. He calls on Nato members to provide naval chaperones and accuses them of cowardice and ingratitude for refusing. He comes across as peevish and flustered. Impotence is not a good look in a potentate.

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Marc Andreessen is wrong about introspection

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Marc Andreessen is wrong about introspection

This newsletter is free to read, and it’ll stay that way. But if you want more - extra posts each month, access to the community, and a direct line to ask me things - paid subscriptions are $2.50/month. A lot of people have told me it’s worth it.

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Appearing on the Founders podcast this week, venture capitalist Marc Andreessen made the rather extraordinary claim that - going back four hundred years - it would never have occurred to anyone to be “introspective.”

Andreessen apparently blames Sigmund Freud and the Vienna Circle with having somehow “manufactured” the whole practice of introspection somewhere between 1910-1920. He summarised his own approach to life thus: "Move forward. Go."

Host David Senra, apparently delighted, congratulated Andreessen on developing what he called a "zero-introspection mindset."

Well, look.

Marc Andreessen was right about web browsers.

But he has since been wrong about a great many things.

And he is entirely wrong about introspection.

A remarkably selective reading of four hundred years

If we accept that introspection is a Viennese invention of the early twentieth century, we have to explain away...well, rather a lot.

Socrates made the examined life a condition of the life worth living, and he arguably died for it. The Stoics built an entire philosophical practice around self-examination: Marcus Aurelius wrote the Meditations as a private exercise in catching himself failing to live by his own principles, and he did this while running the Roman Empire, which suggests he didn't find the two activities incompatible. Augustine's Confessions, written around 400 AD, offer a sustained and searching account of his own interior life that predates Freud by about fifteen centuries, give or take.

In Chinese philosophy, Mencius describes the concept of introspection as "seeking the lost heart," the recovery of something innate that gets buried under the noise of ordinary life. Shakespeare's Hamlet is a play about what happens when you're constitutionally unable to stop examining yourself and start acting, and the fact that Elizabethan audiences immediately recognized this as a problem implies they were already somewhat familiar with the practice being satirized; you can't parody a concept your audience has never encountered.

Andreessen's novel idea that Freud invented introspection is an inversion of the record. What Freud actually did was systematize certain ideas about the unconscious that were already circulating in European intellectual culture and put them into a clinical framework. Half of those ideas were themselves wrong; but "Freud was often wrong" is a very different argument from "people had no inner lives worth examining before 1910."

What the argument is actually doing

Andreessen is no stranger to the written word. His Techno-Optimist Manifesto quotes Nietzsche, he references the Italian Futurists with admiration and he's not unfamiliar with the Western philosophical tradition. So the historical revisionism can’t be called ignorance; this is, on some level, a calculated move. The claim that introspection is a modern pathology serves a specific rhetorical function by delegitimizing an entire mode of engagement with human experience, clearing it off the table, and leaving only external action as the proper response to ~being alive.

Andreessen and his cronies are making large claims about what human beings want and need. His stated personal philosophy is explicitly a vision of human flourishing: abundance, growth, the elimination of material constraints etc. These are claims about what will make people's lives go well. But you can't evaluate those claims without some account of human inner life, because human inner life is where the question of whether a life is going well actually gets answered. You can measure GDP. You can measure life expectancy. You can measure the number of transactions per second your payment processor handles. But none, not one single of these measurements will tell you whether the people whose lives they describe feel that their lives are worth living, whether they find their work meaningful, whether they wake up with something that resembles purpose.

The only access anyone has to those questions is through something like introspection: either their own, or someone else’s honest reports of their experience, or the accumulated testimony of literature and philosophy about what it's like to be a living, breathing, doubting, hurting, internally-screaming human being floating on a God-forsaken rock in a God-forsaken void. Strip that out and you're left with a very thin theory of human flourishing. It basically runs to more is better, faster is better, bigger is better with nothing else added or subtracted or attempted.

Perhaps, you find this to be a defensible position; but you still have to actually argue for it. You can't just claim that the question of what people find meaningful is a Viennese invention and move on.

The soul accusation lands, but for the wrong reason

The response to Andreessen's interview that keeps circulating is that “he hath no soul."

This is, of course, wrong.

Andreessen almost certainly has a rich inner life. He has enthusiasms and anxieties and aesthetic preferences and tribal loyalties and all the rest of it. The problem isn't that there's nothing inside; the problem is that he's chosen not to examine what's there, and has developed an elaborate post-hoc justification for that choice by claiming that examination is itself the pathology.

This is a recognizable pattern. The Victorian vitalists who viewed masturbation as physically debilitating were wrong about the physiology, but they were also engaged in motivated reasoning: they already knew they wanted to prohibit something, and the scientific-sounding justification came later. Andreessen already knows he wants to move fast without examining himself, and the historical argument that introspection is a Freudian manufacture serves exactly that same function.

The practical consequences of an unexamined inner life at scale are not theoretical. The social media platforms built by people who believed behavioral data was a reliable substitute for understanding human psychology produced a decade of engagement metrics while user wellbeing declined and our entire social order decayed. The engineers who built these systems weren't malicious; they were optimizing for things they could measure, because they'd implicitly accepted the view that measurable outputs were a sufficient model of human flourishing. Goodhart's Law exacted its toll: the measure became the target, and the target was not what anyone would have chosen if they'd been forced to actually specify what they were aiming for.

What "move forward, go" cannot tell you

Andreessen's advice to himself, and apparently to others, is directional without being specific. Forward, he says. Forward toward what? His manifesto obsesses over abundance, over the elimination of material suffering, and a future in which technology has lifted constraints that currently limit human possibility. These are goals I can get behind. But "forward" presupposes that you know where you're going, and knowing where you're going presupposes that you know what you want, and knowing what you want doesn’t happen without exactly the examination the man has ruled out.

Andreessen's model of human beings is thin. He can observe behavior. He can track preferences as expressed through market choices. He can measure what people click on and buy and use. What he can't do, without something like introspection, is understand why, and the why is where most of the important information lives.

Four hundred years ago, the people Andreessen imagines were blissfully unselfconscious were reading Augustine and Montaigne and arguing about Stoic philosophy. They were writing diaries and letters that examined their own motives with considerable care. They were not, in fact, just moving forward without asking where they were going. That habit is not a pathology Freud introduced into an otherwise healthy civilization. It's one of the things that makes civilization possible, and pretending otherwise doesn't make you a builder. It just makes you someone who's never looked at the blueprints.

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Those who 'circle back' and 'synergize' also tend to be crap at their jobs

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Cornwell Uni researchers pivot to pluck low-hanging fruit to optimize bandwidth

Workers who believe "leveraging cross-functional synergies" sounds profound may want to rethink their career trajectory because a new study suggests people who fall for corporate word salad also tend to perform worse at their jobs.…

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‘It beggars belief’: MoD sources warn Palantir’s role at heart of government is threat to UK’s security

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UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Louis Mosley, head of Palantir Technologies UK. Graphic: the Nerve

Palantir, the US AI surveillance and security firm with hundreds of millions of pounds in UK government contracts, poses “a national security threat to the UK”, according to two anonymous high-level sources working with the Ministry of Defence. 

The insiders, who are senior systems engineers with knowledge of the Palantir software systems the MoD is using, have come forward to speak after the Nerve published an investigation in January that revealed Palantir had at least £670m worth of contracts across the UK government, including £15m with the UK nuclear weapons agency. 

In that investigation, data and security experts claimed that the contracts with the firm, owned by Peter Thiel, are a critical risk to Britain’s national security. At the time, an MoD spokesman told the Nerve that “all data remains sovereign and under the ownership of the MoD”. 

However, the MoD insiders, who have detailed knowledge of the underlying technology, say such statements are “ignorant” and/or misleading. It’s believed to be the first time individuals currently working with the ministry have spoken out about the national security risks Palantir poses. They are doing so because they believe that these are matters of the highest public interest and that parliament needs to act. 

The first, a senior systems engineer with the MoD who has decades of experience across the defence industry, told the Nerve: “Ministers clearly have a lack of understanding of Palantir’s technology. The statements with respect to sovereign data appear to be missing the point entirely. [They’re] missing the realities of data scraping, of aggregation, and the fact that Palantir is building its own rich picture of our nation that they can use for their own ends.

UK defence secretary John Healey and Palantir Technologies CEO Alex Karp sign a £1.5 billion investment deal, London, September 2025.

“Allowing a single entity, foreign or domestic, to have such far-reaching, pervasive access is inherently dangerous. How our national cybersecurity centre has allowed this beggars belief.”

At the heart of the claims is that while the underlying data may remain under the MoD’s control, any insights derived from that data do not. The implications of this, the insiders say, are far-reaching, especially because of the vast quantity of personal and other data the company has access to across UK government departments. 

One source said: “Palantir does not need to own the data or even have stewardship. They can extract, transform and exploit the metadata to build their own rich picture.”

A second source, who has a background in intelligence, said Palantir probably has “a complete profile on the whole UK population. They have visibility into wildly different focus areas, yet their data is all condensed into one foreign supplier’s control/visibility. At the very least I’d call that a security risk.”

Further, the sources claim that Palantir can see far more information than the government realises. Palantir can aggregate data from across different government datasets to generate top secret information, the Nerve has been told.

One source described a hypothetical example where Palantir could combine three pieces of unclassified information to determine the location of a nuclear submarine. They said: “A parcel is sent out by a defence supplier with a Nato part number, an address and an arrival date. Even if the label is a QR code and isn’t human-readable, the data it contains would allow Palantir to know that a nuclear submarine would be in Diego Garcia on 4 April. Those three bits of information – the part number, Diego Garcia and 4 April – are, individually, completely unclassified. Together, they are secret.”

Duncan McCann, head of tech and data at the Good Law Project, called the information “potentially explosive”. What the revelations show, he says, is that the UK has “given a private company such detailed access to our national security data that they can themselves infer things that they just aren’t supposed to know. For whose benefit is this?” 

The MoD did not respond to the Nerve’s press inquiries. However, in  January, defence minister Luke Pollard told the House of Commons: “All data used and developed in Palantir’s software deployed across the Ministry of Defence will remain under the ownership of the MoD. We have clear contractual controls in place to ensure this as well as control over the data system that Palantir software sits upon.”

The senior systems engineer said this statement was beside the point. He said: “Whether or not the UK technically owns the data is almost irrelevant. That’s like reading a secret love letter and saying the secrets in it are safe, just because you’ve promised never to copy it word for word or take it out of the room.”

“When you have that mosaic built from UK sovereign defence, health, roads, power networks, power stations, and our major industrial bases, you have a detailed understanding of virtually every aspect of the sovereign United Kingdom. For an adversary, or even a nation with whom we have a special relationship, that picture is worth more than all the fine art on Earth.” 

A spokesman for Palantir said: “These entirely false claims have no grounding in fact and no serious media outlet would report them.”

Keir Starmer and Palantir CEO Alex Karp tour Palantir’s Washington headquarters, February 2025. Photo: Carl Court / AFP

Concerns about Palantir’s central role in the UK’s critical infrastructure have heightened since January when President Trump threatened Greenland, a territory of Denmark, a Nato ally. 

Palantir is also being used in America to profile and target immigrants for removal by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers. Palantir’s work with the US Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) helped synthesise tax and Homeland Security data to give Palantir access to the US’s first searchable citizen database, sparking cybersecurity concerns.  It also underpins the AI systems being used by the US military in Venezuela, Gaza and the current operations in Iran

Martin Wrigley, a Liberal Democrat MP and member of the science, innovation and technology Commons select committee, said: “The UK needs sovereign capabilities in sovereign hands, and we need to remove companies closely associated with foreign political organisations that are a risk.”

Jim Killock, executive director of the Open Rights Group, said:If the US has detailed insights across everything that the MoD does, then in the event of us being recalcitrant about helping the US bomb some country, they can remind us – subtly or unsubtly – what they might do in retaliation. 

“The Ministry of Defence or the prime minister must have some inkling of the risks, but now we find ourselves hitched to an erratic, dangerous, megalomaniac power in denial of its own limits. If Palantir knows everything, it just gives them huge extra leverage.”

In contrast to the MoD, the Swiss army rejected Palantir’s technology, despite numerous pitches that included an approach by the head of Palantir UK, Louis Mosley. A key concern of the army, according to an official report seen by Swiss outlet Republik, was the “possibility that sensitive data could be accessed by the US government and intelligence services”.

The Nerve has identified a previous case in which Palantir claimed proprietary rights to data insights after its contract was cancelled. In the early 2010s, the New York Police Department contracted Palantir to help find high-profile targets using data scraping and analysis. In 2017, it cancelled the contract, but Palantir claimed its platforms – Gotham and Foundry, the same systems used inside the UK government – created a unique ecosystem that sat on top of NYPD data. That meant any analysis derived from those platforms was, they claimed, Palantir’s intellectual property.

As Buzzfeed reported at the time: “The emerging dispute is not over the data that the NYPD has fed into Palantir's software, but over the analysis that the software has produced – all the insights.” 

This suggests Palantir could generate insights from UK government data that in turn could be deemed Palantir’s intellectual property. 

According to McCann, “a hallmark of almost every Palantir engagement is an attempt at secrecy, obfuscation – a real difficulty in finding out what is actually going on.We really don’t have the legal architecture to defend against this kind of big tech. The regulators are asleep at the wheel.”

The Nerve is a fearless, independent media title launched by five former Guardian / Observer journalists: investigative journalist Carole Cadwalladr, editors Sarah Donaldson, Jane Ferguson and Imogen Carter and creative director Lynsey Irvine. We cover culture, politics and tech, brought to you in twice weekly newsletters on Tuesdays and Fridays (sign up here). We rely on funding from our community, so please also consider joining us as a paying member. You can read more about our mission here.


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Trump’s ego-trip war has collided with economic reality but he can’t undo the damage | Rafael Behr

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The US president’s doctrine of lawless military adventures harms American interests and boosts Vladimir Putin

Waging war with no fixed purpose means victory can be declared at any point. Donald Trump’s motives for launching Operation Epic Fury against Iran were incoherent at the start. They are no clearer now that he has declared it “very complete, pretty much”.

US and Israeli bombs have caused death and destruction, shaking but not toppling the government in Tehran. Among the targets was the supreme leader, Ali Khamenei. He has been replaced by his son – an “unacceptable” candidate in the US president’s evaluation.

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