London mayor blocks Metropolitan Police contract with Palantir over procurement concerns
The Facts
- The Mayor of London blocked a proposed Metropolitan Police contract with Palantir worth up to £50 million.
- City Hall said the deal was blocked because the Metropolitan Police did not properly follow procurement procedures.
- MOPAC said Palantir was the only supplier the Metropolitan Police had seriously considered for the proposed contract.
- The Metropolitan Police failed to present its procurement strategy to MOPAC for approval before the contract was advanced.
- The proposed contract was intended to support criminal investigations by using Palantir technology to automate or assist intelligence analysis, and also to support reforms within the force.
- MOPAC said it was not satisfied the Metropolitan Police had adequately ensured or demonstrated value for money in the proposed deal.
- The Metropolitan Police criticized the decision and said that if the Palantir deal does not proceed, the force may have to reduce officer numbers.
How left and right are reading this
- Both agree
- A £50 million policing technology deal was stopped because the Metropolitan Police advanced it without proper approval, serious competition, or a convincing case for value for money — failings both framings treat as disqualifying regardless of the contract’s intended benefits.
- They split on
- Less a disagreement than a question of emphasis: the breakdown in public accountability and oversight around a sole-supplier contract, versus the force’s obligation to follow procurement rules and prove fiscal discipline before invoking possible officer cuts.
Context
What was the Palantir contract supposed to do?
The proposed deal would have allowed the Metropolitan Police to use Palantir software, including AI-supported tools, to help automate or speed up intelligence analysis in criminal investigations. The Met also said the contract was tied to internal reform and modernization efforts BBC,Independent,Computing.
Why did City Hall block the deal?
MOPAC said the Metropolitan Police had not followed required procurement steps, including submitting its procurement strategy for approval, and that Palantir was the only supplier seriously considered. It also said the Met had not adequately demonstrated value for money BBC,AOL.com,Yahoo.
What happens next for the Metropolitan Police?
The immediate contract cannot go ahead as proposed, and the Met has said it is in discussions with MOPAC and will keep trying to resolve the issue. The force has also warned that without new technology delivered quickly, it may face tougher budget choices, including possible reductions in officer numbers dpa International,London Now.
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