UK lawmakers call Palantir's role in public sector an unacceptable weakness

A parliamentary committee singled out U.S. tech group Palantir as an instance of Britain's over-reliance ‌on U.S. companies in the public sector, calling it an "unacceptable point of weakness" in a report on Wednesday. Among Palantir's high-profile contracts is one with the National Health Service - valued at £330 million ($444 million) and ‌designed to connect data to support decision-making by healthcare professionals.


Reuters | * Palantir Is A Mismatch With Uk Values | Updated: 03-06-2026 04:31 IST | Created: 03-06-2026 04:31 IST
UK lawmakers call Palantir's role in public sector an unacceptable weakness

A parliamentary committee singled out U.S. tech group Palantir as an instance of Britain's over-reliance ‌on U.S. companies in the public sector, calling it an "unacceptable point of weakness" in a report on Wednesday.

Among Palantir's high-profile contracts is one with the National Health Service - valued at £330 million ($444 million) and ‌designed to connect data to support decision-making by healthcare professionals. The contract was awarded in 2023 ‌for seven years, but warning against vendor lock-in, Parliament's Science, Innovation and Technology Committee urged the government to exercise a break clause.

The 70-page report found that Palantir had increased its presence despite a "clear mismatch with UK values". It ⁠cited Palantir's ​supply of software ⁠for the U.S. military and immigration services, as well as its billionaire co-founder Peter Thiel's political views.

Thiel, an early ⁠supporter of U.S. President Donald Trump, has criticised the concept of a national health service, while the company ​has issued a manifesto making explicitly political arguments, the report said. "The government's ... ambitions could ⁠be derailed at any time by a decision taken outside our shores based on the narrow interests of a ⁠foreign ​commercial or state actor," the committee's report added.

Palantir has been approached for a comment. The committee can only recommend and it is up to the government whether it follows its ⁠advice. Its report concluded that the government lacked a coherent plan for the digital transformation of ⁠public services, calling its ⁠aim to save £45 billion annually through such changes "worryingly optimistic".

It also made broader recommendations for the government's digital strategy, including appointing a senior minister ‌to lead it. ($1 = ‌0.7426 pounds)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Give Feedback