
Chi Onwurah
UK Labour MP; chair of Commons Science, Innovation and Technology Committee.
Last refreshed: 7 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Does the UK have a real technology sovereignty strategy, or just a list of funding announcements?
Timeline for Chi Onwurah
Published correspondence challenging DSIT's technology sovereignty strategy as lacking coherence
European Tech Sovereignty: Onwurah: DSIT has no coherent strategy- What did Chi Onwurah say about the UK's tech sovereignty strategy in May 2026?
- Onwurah published correspondence with DSIT minister Kanishka Narayan stating his sovereignty letter 'fails to set out a coherent strategy for achieving technology sovereignty', arguing the £500m Sovereign AI Unit is not a substitute for a comprehensive policy doctrine.Source: SIT Committee correspondence, May 2026
- Who is Chi Onwurah and what is her background?
- Chi Onwurah is Labour MP for Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West and chair of the Commons Science, Innovation and Technology Committee. She is an electrical engineer by training (Imperial College London) who previously led Ofcom's telecoms technology division before entering Parliament in 2010.
- What is the UK Commons Science, Innovation and Technology Committee?
- The SIT Committee is a House of Commons select committee that scrutinises the work of the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology. Chi Onwurah has chaired it since September 2024; it can summon ministers and publish correspondence publicly.
Background
Chi Onwurah, Labour MP for Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West, publicly challenged DSIT minister Kanishka Narayan in May 2026, stating his sovereignty letter 'fails to set out a coherent strategy for achieving technology sovereignty'. As chair of the Commons Science, Innovation and Technology (SIT) Committee since September 2024, Onwurah published the correspondence to apply pressure on the government's handling of the UK's AI and digital sovereignty strategy, which she argued was relying too heavily on the £500m Sovereign AI Unit as a substitute for structural policy.
Onwurah is the only electrical engineer in the parliamentary Labour Party, having studied at Imperial College London and held senior roles at Ofcom and in telecoms across five countries before entering Parliament in 2010. This technical background makes her scrutiny of DSIT unusually substantive. She served as shadow minister for Industrial Strategy, Science and Innovation from 2016 to 2020, and shadow minister for Science, Research and Digital from 2020 to 2024.
Her criticism in May 2026 crystallised a growing parliamentary consensus that the UK Government had no coherent technology sovereignty doctrine comparable to the EU's Sovereignty Package or US industrial policy frameworks — relying instead on ad hoc spending announcements rather than a published strategy.