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Reading: AI tech groups to be despatched into authorities departments as a part of Starmer’s effectivity drive
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Michigan Post > Blog > Politics > AI tech groups to be despatched into authorities departments as a part of Starmer’s effectivity drive
Politics

AI tech groups to be despatched into authorities departments as a part of Starmer’s effectivity drive

By Editorial Board Published March 12, 2025 5 Min Read
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AI tech groups to be despatched into authorities departments as a part of Starmer’s effectivity drive

AI tech groups will likely be despatched into authorities departments to “drive improvements”, Sir Keir Starmer will announce amid studies of 1000’s of civil service job cuts.

The prime minister is about to announce main reforms to the way in which the state works to “deliver for working people” and to make sure safety within the new world “era of instability”.

His “intervention” will come following studies officers are drawing up plans to chop 1000’s of civil service jobs as a part of proposals dubbed “Project Chainsaw” – a reference to Elon Musk waving a chainsaw to characterize his campaign to chop US authorities spending.

Downing Avenue on Wednesday rejected claims the federal government is “taking a chainsaw to the system”, saying it’s specializing in “making the state more effective, more agile in a way that delivers for working people”.

The prime minister will set out proposals to recruit 2,000 tech apprentices to “turbo charge” the take-up of AI in Whitehall with the goal of modernising departments and ensuring the federal government has the talents to overtake public companies utilizing expertise.

He’ll announce that new AI and tech groups will likely be despatched into public sector departments “to drive improvements and efficiency in public services”.

Sir Keir will say: “No person’s substantive time should be spent on a task where digital or AI can do it better, quicker and to the same high quality and standard.”

Downing Avenue mentioned one in 10 civil servants will work in tech and digital roles throughout the subsequent 5 years.

Picture:
Elon Musk brandished a chainsaw as he promised to chop spending. Pic: Reuters

International instability to speed up modifications

Sir Keir can also be anticipated to argue that world uncertainty means the federal government should “go further and faster in reshaping the state to make it work for working people”.

He’ll vow to chop the price of regulation for companies by 25% and promise to refocus the state on his key missions and create “an active government that takes care of the big questions, so people can get on with their lives”.

And he’ll take goal at a “cottage industry of checkers and blockers slowing down delivery for working people” – after he instructed ministers on Tuesday to cease a “trend” of “outsourcing” selections to “other bodies”.

The PM will say: “The need for greater urgency now could not be any clearer. We must move further and faster on security and renewal.

“Each pound spent, each regulation, each resolution should ship for working individuals.”

He is expected to say he is “decided to grab” the “golden alternative of synthetic intelligence”.

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Technology Secretary Peter Kyle reveals phone waiting times for public services could be cut in half by using artificial intelligence.

0:46

Minister reveals how AI might enhance public companies

Starmer’s dedication to AI

In January, Sir Keir mentioned the federal government would “mainline AI into the veins” of the UK as he claimed that if the expertise is “fully embraced” it might convey £47bn to the financial system annually.

The trial discovered ready instances may very well be reduce in half by utilizing AI, with Expertise Secretary Peter Kyle saying the expertise was a win-win as it would save taxpayers’ cash and make the expertise higher.

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Computer scientist Yoshua Bengio said he is "kept awake at night" by the fear that humans may build systems "smarter than us that we don't know how to control".

0:45

Godfather of AI warns of its risks

On Thursday’s announcement, Mr Kyle mentioned: “There is a £45bn jackpot to secure if we use technology properly across our public sector – but we can’t hope to come close to securing that if we don’t have the right technical talent with us in government.

“Not solely will these modifications assist repair our public companies, however it would save taxpayer money by slashing the necessity for 1000’s of costly contractors and create alternatives throughout the nation throughout the nation as a part of our plan for change.”

TAGGED:departmentsdriveefficiencygovernmentPartStarmersteamstech
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