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THU · 2026-05-21 · 17:53 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0521-78201
News/Met Palantir row gets to heart of how public services should…
NSR-2026-0521-78201Analysis·EN·Technology

Met Palantir row gets to heart of how public services should use AI

London Mayor Sadiq Khan has blocked a £50 million deal between the Metropolitan Police and US AI company Palantir, citing procurement rule breaches and concerns about the company's values. The Metropolitan Police sought Palantir's AI systems to analyze vast amounts of digital evidence amidst funding shortfalls and planned staff cuts.

Robert Booth UK technology editorThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-21 · 17:53 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
Met Palantir row gets to heart of how public services should use AI
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
684words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

London Mayor Sadiq Khan has blocked a £50 million deal between the Metropolitan Police and US AI company Palantir, citing procurement rule breaches and concerns about the company's values. The Metropolitan Police sought Palantir's AI systems to analyze vast amounts of digital evidence amidst funding shortfalls and planned staff cuts. This controversy highlights a broader debate about how public services, including policing, hospitals, and schools, should utilize AI. While the government encourages AI adoption, it lacks its own systems, leading to reliance on controversial private companies like Palantir. Police leaders reportedly believe Palantir is the only provider capable of meeting their complex needs, despite public and internal concerns about privacy and the company's controversial leadership and past contracts.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Technology
Political Strategy
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.60 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood called for police to 'ramp up use of AI' and adopt the technology 'at pace and scale'.

quoteShabana Mahmood
Confidence
1.00
02

The Met faces cutting 1,150 posts due to a £125m funding shortfall.

factualarticle
Confidence
1.00
03

The Metropolitan police are considering paying £50m to US AI company Palantir to help with policing.

factualarticle
Confidence
1.00
04

Sadiq Khan blocked the Met's Palantir deal citing a 'clear and serious breach' of procurement rules and concerns about supporting firms contrary to London's values.

factualSadiq Khan
Confidence
0.90
05

Palantir's AI-enabled surveillance system trial at Scotland Yard was met with disapproval, with officers calling it 'Big Brother'.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.80
§ 04

Full report

3 min read · 684 words
It’s bot vs bobby. The row over whether the controversial US AI company Palantir should be paid £50m to help the Metropolitan police hits to the heart of how public services will be delivered in the coming years.A similar dynamic is playing out in hospitals, schools and town halls, but right now police chiefs are turning to AI to escape a fiscal bind. The UK’s largest police force is shrinking; a £125m funding shortfall means it faces cutting 1,150 posts. Scotland Yard wants to use AI to deploy Palantir’s systems to comb through human intelligence reports, email caches, phone records and the rest of the torrent of digital evidence trail left by 21st century crime.The implication is clear – AI is now seen as a plausible alternative for at least some human Labour in policing and is on its way to becoming a mainstay of the national security apparatus. Human police officers deal with some of society’s most vulnerable people, and also some of the most confidential data and sources. The police want AI to do it too.Scotland Yard is not an outlier in looking at AI. Forces such as Bedfordshire and Leicestershire have used Palantir tech. Despite trying to keep out of the Palantir row by calling it an “operational matter for the Met and Mayor of London”, the Home Office is setting the pace. Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, in January called for police to “ramp up use of AI” and to adopt the technology “at pace and scale”.Labour has set up a national centre called Police AI and is deploying AI as an agent of efficiency in the NHS, the military and the justice system, but the problem is this: the government doesn’t have its own AI systems and the companies that could help are increasingly controversial with the public and politicians.Sadiq Khan’s stated reason for blocking the Met’s Palantir deal was a “clear and serious breach” of procurement rules, but politics lies not far behind. He has also cited “concerns about using public money to support firms who act contrary to London’s values”. Palantir’s leaders, such as its co-founder Peter Thiel and its chief executive Alex Karp, have a knack for controversial statements. Thiel famously said the NHS makes people sick. Karp recently called the disarmament of Germany and Japan after the second world war an “overcorrection”.Many US AI providers find themselves tainted in the public mind by a general distrust of “big tech”, a byword for concentrated power backed by vast lakes of private capital and often bending the knee to Donald Trump. Palantir, with its contracts for Trump’s ICE immigration crackdown, Israel’s military and the US defence department, has become a poster-child for what many in the public and parliament fear is big tech’s dark side.When it recently tried to prove its worth by providing an AI-enabled surveillance system to root out corrupt police officers at Scotland Yard, the rank and file were appalled, calling it “Big Brother” and saying it caused sleepless nights. The Metropolitan police Federation, called this “unchecked use of a controversial AI provider to spy on every single one of our colleagues … not proportionate, just or proper”. It will take some time for the Yard’s top brass to rebuild trust with the rank and file, the police union warned.Where are the alternatives to using an AI system provided by one of the tech giants like Palantir? Police leaders are understood to have concluded there Palantir was the only company that could provide what it needed. One Scotland Yard insider said there were smaller British firms that could provide aspects of the service Palantir promises, albeit on a piecemeal basis.Palantir has a far greater range of tools than most competitors, said Prof Alan Woodward of the University of Surrey’s computer science research centre. British companies cannot yet compete, but, he said, AI is “becoming part of the critical infrastructure and we need to have a degree of independence on it”.“We have the expertise,” he said. “What is needed is the development of the businesses. That’s where Palantir won big. They had [US] government funding.”
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

9 terms
artificial intelligence
1.00
palantir
0.90
public services
0.90
metropolitan police
0.80
ai use in policing
0.80
government ai adoption
0.70
data analysis
0.60
public trust
0.50
procurement rules
0.40
§ 07

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