Danny Kruger
Coverage of Danny Kruger in the Nexus archive.
- Tony Blair and the Reform party both want AI in government, though they can't agree on what for
Tony Blair and Reform MP Danny Kruger both advocate for AI in government but with divergent goals. Blair emphasizes AI's transformative potential for public services and economic competitiveness, while Kruger's Reform party proposes using AI to reduce government size and efficiency. Blair's Institute for Global Change, backed by entities like the Gates Foundation and Oracle, promotes AI as a solution to governance challenges.
- Reform UK civil service plan ‘would sack more planning officers than exist’
Reform UK's civil service reform plan, led by MP Danny Kruger, proposes cutting 13% of civil service roles to save £5bn annually. The analysis reveals the plan would eliminate more planning officers than currently exist and reduce prison staff-supporting psychologists by two-thirds.
- Reform MP refuses to say whether Farage should produce evidence for Russian hack claim
Danny Kruger, a senior Reform UK figure, refused to demand that leader Nigel Farage provide evidence to UK security services regarding his claim of being hacked by Russian agents. Farage alleges a Russian state-sponsored hack led to the Guardian's disclosure of a £5m gift from crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne, a claim Labour and the Conservatives have criticized as a national security risk.
- ‘Too powerful for the public’: Inside Anthropic’s bid to win the AI publicity war
Anthropic claims it withheld a powerful AI model, Mythos, due to cybersecurity risks, sparking debate over whether this was a responsible decision or hype for investment. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and UK MP Danny Kruger raised concerns about potential threats, while X platforms saw widespread discussion.
- ‘Too powerful for the public’: Inside Anthropic’s bid to win the AI publicity war
Anthropic claims it withheld a powerful AI model, Mythos, due to cybersecurity concerns, sparking debates about its motives. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and UK MP Danny Kruger raised alarms about potential risks, while X (Twitter) saw widespread reaction to the announcement.