How Britain's public institutions are being quietly rewired from the inside, and why the architecture has never been presented as a whole.
Meridian — Version 2.0 — Published in the public interest. All sources are in the public domain.
There is a particular kind of corruption that never appears in court.
It leaves no brown envelopes. It requires no whispered conversations in parliamentary corridors. It generates no scandal because it operates entirely in the open -- in parliamentary submissions, company filings, advisory board announcements, and government press releases, each individual element defensible, legitimate, unremarkable on its own.
The scandal, if there is one, only becomes visible when you place every element in the same frame at the same time.
That is what this piece attempts to do.
We call it Tuesday. We call it the way things work. We call it nothing at all, because nobody in a position to name it has any incentive to do so.
Until now.
The Apprentice
Start with something small. Something ordinary.
Somewhere in Britain, an employee of a large organisation with significant public sector ties enrolled on a government-funded AI course. The course costs approximately £18,000 per head. It is fully funded through the Apprenticeship Levy, a payroll tax collected from large employers and redistributed by the government to approved training providers. The employee did not pay a penny. Their employer did not pay a penny. The taxpayer paid. The training provider is a company called Multiverse.1
The employee enrolled in good faith. It appeared on the company intranet as an upskilling opportunity. Genuinely useful content. A real qualification. They signed up without thinking hard about who ran the company. When they found out it was Euan Blair's operation, they felt uncomfortable, pushed it to the back of their mind, and focused on the qualification. That felt like the reasonable thing to do.
Their first substantive project identified a process within their organisation that could, with appropriate AI deployment, reduce a team of approximately twenty people to approximately two. The analysis was thorough. The finding was real. The apprentice, honest enough with themselves to recognise what they had produced, did not implement it. They parked it in the portfolio. It sits there now: complete, sourced, and untouched.
It was only when the Sovereign AI Fund launched under a .gov.uk domain and they looked at who was sitting in the managing partner's chair that they started pulling the thread properly. What came back was not a loose connection or two. It was an architecture.
They did not know, when they produced that analysis, that they were part of something considerably larger than an apprenticeship course. They know now. This is that story.
The Company
Multiverse was founded in 2016 by Euan Blair, eldest son of former Prime Minister Tony Blair. Before founding Multiverse, Euan Blair was UK chief executive of Sarina Russo Group, an employment and training provider with revenues exceeding £100 million. He did not stumble into the apprenticeship sector. He was already operating inside it. He understood, from the inside, how government money flows toward training providers, and what it takes to position a company to capture that flow.
It has raised over $500 million in venture capital. Its backers include General Catalyst, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Google Ventures, Bond Capital, Index Ventures, and StepStone Group. In May 2026 it raised a further $70 million at a $2.1 billion valuation, led by Schroders Capital -- the private markets arm of one of Britain's oldest institutional asset managers. The Schroders involvement is significant: this is not Silicon Valley capital. This is traditional European institutional money entering the cap table for the first time, signalling that Multiverse is being positioned as infrastructure-grade investment, not a growth-stage tech bet.
In the financial year to March 2024, Multiverse generated revenues of £58.9 million from apprenticeship training alone, making it England's largest revenue-generating apprenticeship provider. Pre-tax losses for the year to March 2025 were £63.3 million. Revenues grew to £79.6 million. Cash nearly halved in a single year, from £135.4 million to £81.8 million.3
The May 2026 fundraise press release is architecturally precise. Euan Blair describes Multiverse as “the AI adoption layer of the technology stack.” Not a training company. Not an EdTech platform. A layer of the stack. The press release explicitly names the other layers: Oracle (cloud), Palantir (intelligence), Microsoft M365 (interface). In the same press release, Rachel Reeves, Chancellor of the Exchequer, is quoted as a commercial endorser for a private company run by the son of former Prime Minister Tony Blair -- on the same day the King's Speech announced Digital ID legislation.1 43
The Mechanism
The levy is a payroll tax, set at 0.5% of an employer's annual pay bill, collected through PAYE by HMRC, applied to any UK employer with a pay bill exceeding £3 million annually. There is no market pricing. There is no competitive tender for fee levels. The ceiling is set by civil servants in the Department for Education.
Multiverse charges approximately £18,000 for its AI for Business Analysis course. Its Advanced Software Engineering programme commands £22,000. In 2024-25, apprenticeship starts grew by 52%, from 7,910 to 12,030.2 3
What Multiverse needs is not competitive advantage in a market. It needs proximity to the people who control the budget. It needs to maintain its position on the approved provider list. It needs the funding band for its courses to remain at a level that makes the model work. For all of that, it helps enormously to have the right relationships in the right rooms.
The Lobby
In October 2024, Multiverse submitted written evidence to Parliament's Select Committee inquiry into skills and further education. The submission made specific recommendations for how the Growth and Skills Levy should be designed.4 The Growth and Skills Levy, as subsequently announced, was substantially aligned with those recommendations. Multiverse then announced a commitment to train 15,000 new AI apprentices over two years, funded by that same Levy.5
The Board
In September 2024, Multiverse announced its AI Advisory Board.6 Doug Gurr -- then Chair of the Alan Turing Institute, the UK's national AI research body -- advises the company paid by the state whose AI strategy he helps shape. Kersti Kaljulaid, former President of Estonia, simultaneously sits on Microsoft's AI advisory board: one individual connecting sovereign government experience, big tech infrastructure, and a private training provider that benefits from government-funded AI deployment.
Baroness Martha Lane Fox is a non-executive director of Multiverse while simultaneously serving as chair of the Mayor of London's AI and Jobs Taskforce -- a public body charged with advising on AI employment policy in the capital. Her interest is declared on the Parliamentary register. The conflict has not generated meaningful scrutiny.7
The Revolving Door
In April 2026, Multiverse hired Francesca Fraser as Head of Policy and Public Affairs. Fraser spent nearly two years as Special Adviser at 10 Downing Street, advising the Prime Minister directly on education and skills policy and overseeing the Department for Education -- the precise department that sets the funding band caps Multiverse relies upon.8 Policy expertise developed at taxpayer expense inside the most sensitive policy environment in the country, then monetised inside the private company most positioned to benefit from that policy.
The Data
Multiverse ran approximately 12,000 apprenticeship starts in 2024-25 alone. Each apprentice produces a portfolio of projects. Each project analyses a real process within a real organisation. Each analysis identifies real inefficiencies, real redundancies, real opportunities for automation. The organisations hosting these apprentices are, by the nature of the Levy mechanism, large institutions -- many of them embedded throughout the British public sector.
Every project portfolio lives in Multiverse's platform, Atlas. Multiverse's published privacy terms confirm the company collects skills profiles, work experience, education history, and project portfolios. The legal basis for much of this processing is cited as “legitimate business interest,” not consent. Data already held may be automatically migrated to other parts of the platform without additional consent.9
The May 2026 press release cites £2 billion in tracked return on investment generated for clients.1 That figure is the quantified value of the efficiency map.
No Multiverse apprentice has, to public knowledge, filed a GDPR Subject Access Request to establish precisely what is held on them, how it is processed, and who it is shared with. Under GDPR, that right costs nothing to exercise. The answer -- particularly whether any data-sharing agreement with any Microsoft or Palantir entity appears in the response -- would either confirm or deny the most structurally important inference in this investigation.
The Forward Deployed Engineer
The Forward Deployed Engineer model was pioneered by Palantir. The principle: instead of selling software and expecting the client to implement it, embed your own engineers inside the client organisation. They work on the client's systems, using the client's data, building institutional knowledge that creates switching costs too high to overcome. The FDE does not merely deliver a product. They become the product.
On 11 May 2026, OpenAI launched the OpenAI Deployment Company with $4 billion in committed capital, simultaneously acquiring Edinburgh-based Tomoro AI and approximately 150 forward deployed engineers. On 4 May 2026, Anthropic announced a parallel enterprise services venture structured as a standalone entity with engineers embedded directly within client organisations, backed by Blackstone, Goldman Sachs, and Hellman and Friedman, valued at $1.5 billion. Three companies now simultaneously deploying the FDE architecture at enterprise scale.10 11 116
Multiverse's enrolled learners are forward deployed engineers. Not metaphorically. Structurally. Each apprentice is embedded inside a host organisation, producing project work mapping real institutional processes, trained in the specific toolset -- Microsoft M365, AI Business Analysis, the Palantir-adjacent skills framework -- that the intelligence and interface layers of the architecture require.
This is not an allegation of individual bad faith. The apprentice enrolled in good faith. The employer signed up for legitimate upskilling. The course content is real. The qualification is genuine. None of that changes what the aggregate architecture produces, or who benefits from it.
The European Expansion
The May 2026 fundraise is explicitly for European expansion. In January 2026, four months before the public announcement, Multiverse quietly acquired StackFuel, a Berlin-based data and AI training company with existing institutional client relationships inside German corporations including Mercedes-Benz, IAV, and Telefónica. The Atlas platform, the project portfolio data collection architecture, and the Palantir strategic alliance are now being deployed into European institutions through an established German client base. Multiverse did not enter Europe cold. It bought its way in.110
StackFuel has held AZAV certification since 2020 -- the accreditation required for all providers funded by the German Federal Employment Agency. Under Germany's Qualifizierungschancengesetz, employers receive up to 100% of training costs reimbursed. The state bears the cost; the training provider captures the revenue. The same funding model that drives the British apprenticeship architecture is now being deployed in Germany under German law.111
The Palantir and Microsoft alliances confirmed in the May 2026 press release are entity-level, not geography-limited. They apply to the combined Multiverse-StackFuel operation. General Catalyst, Multiverse's lead investor, leads the EU AI Champions Initiative, launched at the Paris AI Action Summit in dialogue with European Commission President von der Leyen.112 113
The Surveillance Company
On the morning of 12 May 2026, Jeremy Corbyn posted a message that circulated widely: “Palantir has been granted unlimited access to NHS patient data. This is the same company that is involved in mass surveillance and genocide. We did not consent to this. Get Palantir out of our NHS, now.”
He was not wrong. And the story is considerably more disturbing than even that post suggested.
What Palantir Is
Palantir Technologies was founded in 2003 by Peter Thiel, seeded by In-Q-Tel, the CIA's venture capital arm. A 2020 review by Privacy International and No Tech for Tyrants found that Palantir's two primary platforms -- Gotham (military and law enforcement) and Foundry (civilian-facing) -- share the same underlying architecture. The wall between them is contractual, not technical.12
What Palantir Does
In the United States, Palantir has powered ICE immigration enforcement since 2014. Its FALCON system enables ICE to cross-reference names, locations, vehicles, and passport information against federal databases. Amnesty International documented Palantir's role in operations that included the forcible separation of unaccompanied children from their parents.13
What Palantir Holds in Britain Verified
In the United Kingdom, Palantir holds verified contracts worth at minimum over £900 million: NHS England (£330 million Federated Data Platform, seven-year term); Ministry of Defence (£240.6 million, awarded December 2025 without competitive tender under a defence and security exemption, covering “all security classifications”); AWE nuclear infrastructure (£15 million); FCA (fraud and money laundering intelligence); eleven police forces; multiple local councils.14 15 16 17
An internal NHS briefing note acknowledged the creation of an “admin” role granting Palantir staff access to identifiable patient data. NHS England states Palantir is a processor not a data controller, and that Palantir cannot commercialise NHS data or train its own AI models. Those assurances are on record. The National Data Opt-Out does not apply to the FDP; it operates under a Section 254 legal direction which overrides the opt-out for centralised data management.14
The Gaza Refinement Verified
Project Lavender generates lists of suspected militants for targeting. The Gospel identifies buildings and infrastructure as bombing targets. Both were confirmed by +972 Magazine and Local Call in April 2024 through leaked testimonies from Israeli intelligence officers. The IDF described The Gospel as generating “a production line” of targets with limited individual human review. These systems ran on Oracle's cloud infrastructure in Israel.18
The Revolving Door: At Least 69 Government Hires
OpenDemocracy reported in January 2026 that Palantir hired four Ministry of Defence officials in 2025 alone. The most recent, Barnaby Kistruck, the MoD's Director of Industrial Strategy, joined Palantir as a senior counsellor nine days after leaving his post, months before Palantir won its largest-ever MoD contract.106
The Nerve's subsequent investigation identified at least 32 senior government and public sector officials who have taken up roles at Palantir -- across NHS, MoD, Home Office, Foreign Office, FCDO, UKSA, and Downing Street -- plus an additional 37 mid-ranking hires. At least 69 identified government hires in total.107
The Swiss Warning and the CLOUD Act Reported
A Swiss Army internal assessment concluded it could not exclude the risk that Palantir would pass classified military data to the CIA and NSA. Switzerland rejected Palantir across nine separate agency evaluations over seven years. In January 2026, Palantir filed proceedings against Republik magazine in the Zurich Commercial Court, seeking to compel publication of counterstatements. No damages sought; no defamation claim made. The European Federation of Journalists classified the action as a potential SLAPP suit.117 19
The UK government has not published an equivalent sovereignty assessment. No evidence exists that one has been conducted. Under the CLOUD Act, US agencies can compel American companies to produce data held on their systems -- including data stored outside the United States -- without requiring a UK court order. The contractual assurances that NHS data “remains subject to UK controls” are silent on CLOUD Act compelled access obligations.
The MOPAC Block Verified
On 21 May 2026, Sadiq Khan blocked the Metropolitan Police from signing a £50 million contract with Palantir. Deputy Mayor Kaya Comer-Schwartz cited “a clear and serious breach of the applicable procedural requirements,” finding the Met had only seriously engaged with a single potential supplier. The letter explicitly cited vendor lock-in risk as a material reason for withholding approval.20
The Met's response: “The decision by Mopac is disappointing. We need to modernise and use the very best technology available. For now, this decision prevents us using technology already available to the MoD, the NHS and other police forces.” That is the argument from fait accompli. A precedent created by insufficient scrutiny should not become the justification for wider dependency. The MOPAC block is the first documented instance of a public body with appropriate authority rejecting a Palantir contract on grounds of procurement integrity and vendor lock-in risk.
The Mandelson Facilitation Reported
In 2018, Palantir hired Peter Mandelson's lobbying firm Global Counsel. Matthew Swindells, Deputy CEO of NHS England until July 2019, joined Global Counsel two months after leaving and immediately began advising Palantir on NHS contracts. He went on to chair Palantir's health advisory board while simultaneously chairing four NHS hospital trusts, including Chelsea and Westminster, the first trust to pilot Palantir technology.21
Keir Starmer's February 2025 visit to Palantir's Washington headquarters was arranged by Mandelson through the British Embassy. Seven months after that meeting, Palantir received the £240.6 million MoD contract with no competitive tender.22
Starmer sacked Mandelson on 11 September 2025 following publication of emails in which Mandelson urged Epstein to “fight for early release” before his 2008 sentencing and described his conviction as wrongful.118 On 4 February 2026, the Metropolitan Police opened a criminal investigation into Mandelson for Misconduct in Public Office.73 Global Counsel collapsed into administration. Separately: Jeffrey Epstein is confirmed as a limited partner in Peter Thiel's Valar Ventures fund from 2014 to 2019, years after his 2008 conviction for child sex offences, investing $40 million across two funds.108
The Funder
Larry Ellison is the founder of Oracle. In Britain, he is almost entirely unknown to the general public. In Washington, Tel Aviv, and Silicon Valley, he is one of the most consequential figures of the current era.
In 2021, Oracle built an underground data centre in Jerusalem, four floors below street level, inside a bunker described as having ceilings of “steel-plate coated concrete capable of withstanding a car-bomb explosion.” Oracle was the first hyperscale company to open a cloud region in Israel.24
Oracle CEO Safra Catz visited Israel in January 2024, met with Netanyahu, Defence Minister Gallant, and war cabinet minister Gantz, and committed to double Oracle's investment. With Gallant, Catz discussed “how Oracle could provide security assistance to Israel.”25
Ellison invested £257 million confirmed floor in the Tony Blair Institute between 2021 and onwards. The scale of funding took TBI from approximately 200 to approaching 1,000 staff. “The meetings were like they're part of the same organisation,” a former TBI staffer told Lighthouse Reports.26
At the Dubai World Governments Summit in February 2025, Ellison told Blair that NHS data was “fragmented.” Two weeks later, Blair's institute published a report describing the UK's data infrastructure as “fragmented and unfit for purpose” -- an echo precise enough to be a quotation. TBI's National Data Library report was cited 29 times in Parliament.26 27
Named TBI staff were placed inside government simultaneously. Charlotte Refsum in a Department of Health NHS data working group. Tom Westgarth on the government's AI plan, while on TBI payroll. Kirsty Innes moved from TBI into DSIT. The same individuals whose salaries were funded by Ellison were writing the policy frameworks that would benefit Oracle.26
The Architects
In 2022, Peter Thiel invested $15 million in JD Vance's Ohio Senate primary. Vance was polling in single digits before Thiel's intervention. He is now Vice President of the United States.29 Thiel founded Palantir. Palantir holds confirmed contracts across UK critical infrastructure exceeding £900 million.
Ellison's emails to Israeli diplomat Ron Prosor, confirmed through the Handala hack and reported by Drop Site News: “I spent a couple of hours with Marco Rubio. I think you will be very pleased... I am putting him in touch with Tony Blair.” Ellison subsequently hosted a $5 million fundraiser for Rubio.30 Rubio is now Secretary of State, on the Gaza reconstruction board with Tony Blair.
His son David Ellison has acquired Paramount and CBS News. The Oracle-Palantir strategic partnership, announced April 2024, is the commercial expression of what was already an operational relationship.23
The Family
Tony Blair, through TBI, shapes the government's AI and data policy agenda. That agenda creates the funding streams -- the Growth and Skills Levy, the Sovereign AI Fund, the National Data Library contracts -- that the rest of the architecture depends upon.
Euan Blair's company captures the workforce training funding stream and holds, through Atlas, a distributed map of operational inefficiency across British institutional life. It has confirmed a strategic alliance with Palantir and Microsoft. Its founder calls it “the AI adoption layer of the technology stack.”
Suzanne Ashman Blair, Euan Blair's wife and Tony Blair's daughter-in-law, is Managing Partner of the UK Government's Sovereign AI Fund: £500 million, operating under a .gov.uk domain, providing not just capital but sovereign compute, fast-tracked visas, and access to national datasets. The fund decides which AI companies receive access to the data infrastructure of the British state. That chair belongs to the daughter-in-law of the man whose institute shaped the policy environment that created it.
The Fund's First Move Verified
On 12 May 2026, the Sovereign AI Fund announced its first investment: a participation in Isomorphic Labs' $2.1 billion Series B round, led by Thrive Capital, founded by Josh Kushner. Josh Kushner is the brother of Jared Kushner, who sits on the Gaza Board of Peace alongside Tony Blair.31 32 Other co-investors included Abu Dhabi's MGX and Singapore's Temasek.
The Infrastructure Stack
Layer One: Oracle (Cloud). 185 UK government contracts. £1.1 billion UK public sector revenue since 2022. The identity registry for Digital ID has not yet been procured. Oracle is structurally positioned as the natural provider. This is a structural inference, not a confirmed fact. Speculative
Layer Two: Palantir (Intelligence). The Foundry platform ingests an organisation's data and rebuilds it inside a proprietary ontology. Replacing it does not mean switching software. It means reconstructing institutional knowledge from scratch while running live services that depend on it. The MOPAC letter named this explicitly as a material procurement risk.
Layer Three: Microsoft M365 (Interface). Since 2023, Palantir Foundry has been available on the Microsoft Azure Marketplace with bidirectional integration. In December 2025 and January 2026, Microsoft's release notes announced: “Bring your own Microsoft Foundry agents into Microsoft 365 Copilot.”33 34 35 The Power Query connector from M365 to Foundry was updated March 2026.
Layer Four: Multiverse (Human Adoption). “The AI adoption layer of the technology stack.” Confirmed strategic alliances: Palantir and Microsoft. Confirmed NHS partnership: upskilling NHS staff in Palantir tools. The human adoption layer and the intelligence layer are now formally and publicly connected. Verified
Three layers purchased commercially. The fourth funded by the taxpayer through the Apprenticeship Levy and shaped by a policy environment designed by the same family that runs it.
The Legislative Perimeter
The Children's Wellbeing and Schools Act (Royal Assent 29 April 2026) introduces a Single Unique Identifier -- intended to be the NHS number -- linking every child's health, education, social care, and police records from birth. Liberty noted the Act creates “new powers for non-consensual data flows” and that Parliament was asked to sign “a blank cheque” on what the identifier would become. Defend Digital Me documented the government making “false claims and assurances” in its Delegated Powers Memorandum.36 37 38
The Digital Access to Services Bill (King's Speech 13 May 2026): “My ministers will also proceed with the introduction of Digital ID.” After a parliamentary petition signed by nearly three million people. After an apparent reversal in January 2026. It was not scrapped. It was reframed.39 The identity infrastructure has not been publicly procured. No contract has been announced.
The Online Safety Act mandates biometric age assurance -- in practice facial age estimation -- for access to certain online content. The data generated by population-scale biometric verification of the adult population is not a byproduct of this process. It is its most commercially valuable output.
Sovereignty-as-a-Service
A new Prime Minister cannot exit the Oracle cloud without erasing the data memory of the NHS and the National Data Library. Cannot remove Palantir without blinding the NHS, MoD, FCA, and eleven police forces simultaneously. Cannot deprecate M365 Copilot without removing the primary interface through which the civil service interacts with its own data.
The civil service that a new government inherits will not be a neutral instrument awaiting direction. It will be a thin strategic core managing a portfolio of subscriptions.
The switching costs are the moat. The Procurement Act 2023 permits single-source awards where replacing an existing supplier would cause technical difficulties -- provisions now in use to renew Palantir contracts on the grounds that Palantir's own presence makes its replacement impossible. That is the architecture's most important feature, and it was never presented to Parliament as a feature.
The Accountability Gap
When an agentic workflow running on Palantir Foundry, surfaced through Microsoft 365 Copilot, produces a clinical prioritisation, a policing intelligence flag, a benefits determination -- the existing constitutional architecture of British government has no answer for who is accountable.
Ministerial responsibility requires a minister who made a choice. Judicial review requires an identifiable human decision-maker. Parliamentary sovereignty requires legislation debated and passed as a whole. None of those conditions are satisfied by an agentic system operating inside contracted private infrastructure.
No governance framework proposed by DSIT or the Cabinet Office addresses this. No parliamentary debate on the cumulative constitutional implications of what is already in place has been scheduled. Inferred
The Media
In 2024, Guardian News and Media sold The Observer to Tortoise Media -- which was seeded, in part, by an investment led by Suzanne Ashman Blair, then a General Partner at LocalGlobe. The Scott Trust took a 9% equity stake in Tortoise Media, invested £5 million in cash, placed a representative on both the Tortoise company board and the editorial board, and entered a five-year commercial agreement.41
Carole Cadwalladr and four former Observer colleagues founded The Nerve in late September 2025. Its first investigation examined Tony Blair's financial relationships with Larry Ellison.42 The Observer did not publish that investigation.
The evidence does not support a claim that the acquisition was a deliberate operation to silence critical journalism. It supports a claim that the acquisition had that structural effect.
The Counter-Arguments
Counter-argument one: Ring-fenced funding and diversified donors. TBI's accounts name the Gates Foundation, the Wellcome Trust, USAID, and the World Bank. TBI states donations are ring-fenced and it does not advocate for specific vendors. The presence of other funders complicates a simple captured-by-Ellison framing.
Counter-argument two: Commercial media reality, not deliberate capture. The Observer sale took place in a context of documented commercial distress. Tortoise was a credible acquirer with editorial independence commitments written into the deal terms. No documented editorial intervention, no injunctions, no SLAPP suits have been recorded.
Counter-argument three: Legal procurement with functioning oversight. Palantir's contracts were awarded under existing procurement rules. Some were competitively tendered. Those that were not used legal exemptions applicable to defence and security contexts. Parliamentary scrutiny is active. FOI processes are available and being used.
The architecture operates through legal channels, access, and the alignment of incentives rather than through covert conspiracy. That is a more accurate description of how power functions -- and a more disturbing one, because systems that operate within the law are considerably harder to challenge than systems that break it.
What Has Been Resisted and What Remains Possible
This is not a counsel of despair. The resistance is real and documented.
Nearly three million people signed a parliamentary petition on Digital ID. Parliament debated it. The government was forced into a public reversal, however temporary, by the scale of public opposition. The British Medical Association has announced its intention to explore how doctors can refuse to use Palantir's software. The NUJ has raised concerns about journalist data. Foxglove, Liberty, Big Brother Watch, and Amnesty International are conducting active legal and advocacy campaigns.
MOPAC demonstrated that a public body with appropriate authority can block a Palantir procurement on procedural and lock-in grounds -- but only before installation. In France, the DGSI's decade-long attempt to find a sovereign alternative to Palantir failed: no adequate alternative was developed before the contract expired, and the renewal was signed. In Germany, the Bundeswehr's cyber chief publicly refused Palantir on data sovereignty grounds, and the BfV chose a European sovereign alternative. The difference between the successful resistance and the failed resistance is always the same: the successful cases acted before installation.
Three specific accountability mechanisms are available immediately, without legislation or litigation. First: a GDPR Subject Access Request to Multiverse Atlas. The response either confirms or denies data sharing with any Microsoft or Palantir entity. Second: an FOI to DSIT requesting any pre-procurement market engagement with Oracle, Palantir, or Microsoft on Digital ID identity infrastructure. Third: a parliamentary question to DSIT or Cabinet Office asking any minister to confirm or deny whether UK government departments are currently running Palantir Foundry agents within M365 Copilot environments.
What remains possible in the longer term: parliamentary scrutiny adequate to the scale of the decisions being made. The NHS FDP break clause being invoked at the 2027 decision point. A governance framework for the Sovereign AI Fund commensurate with its conflicts of interest. And a sovereign AI alternative: local inference nodes, federated data, community data centres, open models that can be audited, hosted domestically, and governed under frameworks that answer to elected institutions.
Claims Not Yet Evidenced by Primary Source
Speculative Oracle Digital ID procurement. Oracle holds 185 UK government contracts and is structurally positioned as the natural provider for the Digital ID identity registry. No contract has been announced. No procurement process described. Architectural inference, not evidence.
Speculative Atlas to Foundry data pathway. The Palantir-Microsoft integration creates the technical conditions for Atlas-held efficiency data to flow into the Foundry ontology. Whether this is contractually occurring is unconfirmed. GDPR Subject Access Requests are the available instrument.
Speculative The Capita displacement pattern. Each link in the chain is confirmed: Capita as a named Multiverse client, the apprenticeship curriculum design, the automation-identifying nature of the project work. Whether the aggregate produces deliberate workforce reduction within contracted public services is not confirmed. It is the logical output of the architecture operating as designed.
Speculative Constitutional endpoint. If the agentic workflow architecture matures at current trajectory, operational decisions of the British state will be substantially produced by autonomous AI systems on private foreign-owned infrastructure within one parliamentary term. Direction confirmed. Timeline and completeness are not.
Speculative Children's data profiling endpoint. The SUI plus NHS genomic data plus AI tutoring plus Palantir Foundry architecture creates technical conditions for longitudinal profiling of children from birth through workforce placement. Technically possible. Not decided, announced, or impact-assessed.
Sources — The Investigation (References 1–43)
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- [2] DfE Find Apprenticeship Training. AI for Business Analysis, funding band. findapprenticeshiptraining.apprenticeships.education.gov.uk
- [3] FE Week, 26 Sep 2025 and Sifted, Jan 2026. Revenue, starts data, loss figures, cash position. feweek.co.uk
- [4] Parliament Select Committee written evidence, Oct 2024. committees.parliament.uk
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- [6] UK Tech News, 6 Sep 2024. Multiverse AI Advisory Board. uktech.news
- [7] Parliament. Martha Lane Fox declared interests. members.parliament.uk
- [8] EdTech Innovation Hub. Francesca Fraser appointment. edtechinnovationhub.com
- [9] Multiverse Atlas support documentation and Privacy Policy. support.multiverse.io
- [10] OpenAI Deployment Company launch, 11 May 2026. openai.com
- [11] Digit.fyi. OpenAI acquisition of Tomoro AI (Edinburgh). digit.fyi
- [12] Privacy International / No Tech for Tyrants, 2020. Palantir architecture review. privacyinternational.org
- [13] Novara Media, Feb 2026. Palantir penetration of British state; ICE; Amnesty. novaramedia.com
- [14] The Register, 12 May 2026. NHS England confirms Palantir patient data access. theregister.com
- [15] TechRadar. Palantir MoD contract £240.6m; no competitive tender. techradar.com
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- [17] The Nerve. Palantir UK contracts overview. thenerve.news
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- [19] Medact briefing. Swiss Army rejection; nine evaluations. medact.org
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- [21] Byline Times, Mar 2026. Mandelson, Global Counsel, Palantir. bylinetimes.com
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- [31] CBS News. Gaza Board of Peace composition. cbsnews.com
- [32] gov.uk press release, 12 May 2026. Sovereign AI Fund: Isomorphic Labs investment. gov.uk
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- [34] Microsoft Copilot release notes, Dec 2025-Jan 2026. Foundry agents into M365. releasebot.io
- [35] Microsoft Learn. Palantir Foundry Power Query Connector, Mar 2026. learn.microsoft.com
- [36] UK Parliament. Children's Wellbeing and Schools Act, Royal Assent 29 Apr 2026. bills.parliament.uk
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- [39] Hansard. Mandatory Digital ID debate, Oct 2025. hansard.parliament.uk
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