Turning rhetoric into action: how policy would build effective sovereign capability

29 Mar 2021 01:21 PM

Over the last 30 years, I have watched Britain’s telecommunication networks industry bear the brunt of external financialisation and internal neglect – first, as an engineer seeing as our UK telecoms capability was bought and sold, and then as a Labour MP observing Conservative governments’ lack of industrial strategy narrow our industrial base. 

I now see the Conservative Government come round to Labour’s position on securing national capability in our investment rules and in our telecoms security rules. Yet, there is no, or at least very little, pleasure in being proved right – the cost has been too high for our country! 

Agreement in theory 

The scandal of Government’s national security compromise with Huawei has changed the terms of debate. In Parliament and in industry,  traditionally differing sides have come together on the need for action.  

Action which I should say I largely set out last year: on open standards; investment in next-generation communications; international coordination; commercialisation; and non-5G wireless technologies. 

Four principles to strengthen action and secure sovereign capability 

To put those views into action, we need stronger Government action. To really develop domestic capability and attract new vendors, we need all of us – our policy, our network operators, our disruptive tech SMEs, our investor base, our academic strength – to act together, to act urgently and to act consistently. 

From my position, in both industry and parliament, four principles for action stand out.

Guest blog by Chi Onwurah, Labour MP for Newcastle upon Tyne Central. She currently undertakes the roles of Shadow Minister (Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy), and Shadow Minister (Digital, Culture, Media and Sport). You can follow Chi on Twitter here.

To read more from #DiversifyingTelecoms Campaign Week check out our landing page here.