The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change (TBI), headed by former prime minister and Iraq War architect Sir Tony Blair, argued around a million public sector workers can be fired and £40 billion (~$52 billion) can be saved by harnessing Artificial Intelligence (AI).
“There is only one game changer in our view, [and] that is harnessing … the 21st-century technological revolution,” Blair said at the institute’s annual conference, shortly after his Labour Party returned to power under Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, after 14 years in opposition.
“In this new world, companies and nations will either rise or fall,” Blair warned. The TBI believes around 40 percent of the tasks currently carried out by public sector workers could be at least partly automated by AI.
Blair wields enormous influence over Prime Minister Starmer, who went out on a limb to say the deeply unpopular former Labour leader was a “very successful” premier and defend his controversial knighthood. The former Labour leader has been trying to use that influence from the outset of Starmer‘s premiership, urging him to increase tax by an additional £50 billion ($63.9 billion).
His proposal to slash the public sector using AI will be controversial, however, as there is a vast client state of workers on the government payroll, which the Conservatives failed to tame, which votes reliably for the Labour Party. Public sector unions are also a significant funding source for the leftist party, leaving Starmer with little incentive to cut the public sector down to size.