Who is
Louis Mosley, the man tasked with defending Palantir against its critics?
The
company’s UK and Europe boss has become a lightning rod for the British
public’s fear of a US tech takeover
Robert
Booth
Robert
Booth UK technology editor
Sat 9 May
2026 11.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/may/09/who-is-louis-mosley-defending-palantir-critics
The hall
was packed with rightwing radicals when Louis Mosley heralded a coming
revolution. Just as Oliver Cromwell – that “crusader for Christ and liberty” –
routed King Charles I’s royalists, “a similar revolution is brewing today”,
said the UK and Europe boss of Palantir. Globalism’s “twilight” was upon us, he
said in a speech dotted with admiring mentions of the podcaster Joe Rogan and
“Elon’s Doge”.
It was
not a typical peroration for a big UK government contractor with more than
£600m in deals with the NHS, the Ministry of Defence and police. But Palantir,
the world’s most controversial tech company, is no typical contractor. In
recent years it has gained firm footholds across Britain’s public sector while
appalling critics with its leadership’s rightwing rhetoric and its work for the
US and Israeli militaries and Donald Trump’s ICE immigration crackdown.
Calls are
growing for Keir Starmer’s government to cut its ties with the company that was
co-founded by the Trump-backing tech billionaire Peter Thiel. It means Mosley
has become a lightning rod for public fear of a US tech takeover of the British
state. It has fallen to him to fight back. Almost daily his boyish features can
be seen defending Palantir against its critics on X.com, on podcasts and on BBC
News sofas. But who is Mosley and what does he think?
Mosley’s
Cromwell speech, which was delivered in 2025, came at a rally organised by the
Alliance for Responsible Citizenship, a convening organisation of the
west-must-win libertarian Christian right. It was also addressed by Jordan
Peterson, Thiel and Nigel Farage. Mosley delivered it with the calm,
intellectual self-confidence that could be expected of a man educated at
Westminster school and the University of Oxford. But it also contained a whiff
of conspiracy.
Watch out
for the Disc, Mosley warned – the dissent-crushing “distributed idea
suppression complex” consisting of “armies of fact checkers and experts”,
activists, lawyers, academics and journalists. Here was a force more powerful
than the Spanish inquisition. Brexit, Trump and the rise of populism were signs
of cracks in the Disc and now, with technology shifting power from
establishment to insurgent, the moment was coming to start “restoring our
civilisation”.
Freedom,
Christian tolerance, curiosity, and open democratic debate were the doorway to
a better future and Palantir wanted to lead society through that door, said
Mosley.
Mosley is
an important figure at Palantir. He is not trained as a technologist, but
worked in Tory politics, including spells as an assistant to Rory Stewart and
as a councillor in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. He read history
at Oxford where he met his wife, Nura Khan, a fashion editor, with whom he has
four children. He is more likely to be seen reading biographies – Aneurin Bevan
and Stalin have been recent subjects – than coding manuals.
Associates
say he is “easy to like”, sensitive and intelligent. He had a spell working on
strategy at the bank Santander, before being hired by Palantir in 2016, rising
to lead its now 700-strong UK and Europe operation in a chic exposed brick
headquarters in London’s Soho. He had success pitching directly to government
ministers and securing deals to install Palantir’s AI-powered analysis tools as
an operating system to make sense of mountains of public data.
His name
has been a burden, at least in some ways. He came close to becoming a
Conservative parliamentary candidate in 2017, but his candidacy was axed by a
party fearful of association with his grandfather Sir Oswald Mosley, the leader
of the British Union of Fascists in the 1930s.
Online,
where much of the debate about Palantir plays out, Mosley’s habit of wearing
dark tops has raised eyebrows. The Green party leader, Zack Polanski, recently
pointed out the parallel to the “blackshirt” garb of Oswald Mosley’s followers.
But it was no nod to fascism, said Libby Bateman, a former Conservative county
councillor who knew Louis Mosley when he worked with Stewart in Cumbria. It was
more because black suited his fair complexion. She sympathised because
“everyone likes to pick on Louis because of who his grandad was”.
In 2019,
he won a contract with the government to help with Brexit planning after
pitching directly to Michael Gove, who was impressed by Mosley’s intellectual
curiosity. When Stewart was prisons minister, Palantir pitched its software to
manage prisoner data, initially on a no-cost basis and, when the pandemic
struck, Boris Johnson’s government called in Mosley and other tech executives
for help. Mosley offered to track infections and hospital beds and later
enabled the vaccine rollout. By 2023, Palantir had signed a seven-year £330m
deal with NHS England to provide its Foundry system to enable the creation of a
federated data platform.
For a
couple of years this key contract faced low-level opposition from some doctors
and campaigners, with others finding the technology useful. But in recent
months Mosley has faced a darkening anti-Palantir mood, fuelled by one of its
clients, ICE shooting dead two people in January plus the role of its
technology in wars in Gaza and Iran. The company’s reputation has also been
shaded also by its association with Peter Mandelson, whose Global Counsel
lobbying company worked for Palantir until its collapse over the peer’s
relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
“Palantir
has become a bogey in which some of our broader fears about tech and some of
our broader concerns about particular political developments are focused,” said
Gove.
Last
month, cross-party MPs called for the NHS contract to be cancelled, describing
Palantir as “shameful” and “dreadful” and citing fears about the security of
patient data and public trust. Mosley repeatedly hit back against critics who
“have chosen ideology over patient safety” and claimed the company’s software
had helped deliver 110,000 additional operations and cut discharge delays. But
public antipathy was inflamed again last month when Palantir’s US office posted
a manifesto extolling the benefits of American power and implying some cultures
were inferior to others.
Another
associate described Mosley as straddling “the frontline between rival ideas of
tech and its place in the world … [between] an American versus a European
vision of tech”.
On one
side are the US accelerationists who believe that only by applying the most
advanced AIs to whole government systems will western democracy avoid being
eclipsed by totalitarianism. In Europe people want to pedal slower, install
guardrails and fear tech companies gaining too much power could usher in
another kind of tyranny.
Polling
for the campaigning organisation 38 Degrees shared with the Guardian suggests
Mosley faces an uphill battle. More than two-thirds of the UK public are
concerned at Palantir’s growing number of public contracts and 40% distrust it
to not access NHS patient data, despite the company repeatedly insisting it
cannot and will not do so.
What Gove
saw of the tech company in government led him to believe that “used with
wisdom, Palantir was and is capable of providing huge boons to government in
delivering services effectively”. But others, including some NHS doctors,
dispute this and fear its benefits are overplayed.
Tom
Bartlett, who, until five weeks ago was the deputy director of data engineering
at NHS England, has praised the Palantir-enabled NHS system for dramatically
accelerating data analysis requests affecting frontline care that used to take
months.
“To have
got this technology up and running is fantastic,” he said, stressing he was
speaking independently. He said the “huge negativity” around the company was
creating adoption hesitancy that would impact patients’ outcomes.
Mosley
has embraced the foundational idea of Palantir, launched after 9/11 to help the
US win the war on terror. It was named after the all-seeing crystal stones from
The Lord of the Rings, which, as Mosley later explained, “are made by the
goodies – by elves – but they fall into the hands of the baddies – the wizards
– and they get used for evil purposes”.
It is,
said Mosley, a constant reminder that “you’re building a very, very powerful
tool, and in the wrong hands, very powerful tools can be extremely dangerous.
But in the right hands, they can be used to do extraordinarily good things.”
This
troubles Palantir’s critics such as the Labour MP Rachael Maskell.
“The
biggest fear of all is when our data does get into the hands of the bad actors
who may want to use this for ill, not good,” she said. “We need only look
across the Atlantic to see how integrated data has informed the ICE unit to
target migrant communities, and this is the same technology which holds our NHS
data and coordinates our defence information.”
Palantir’s
problem now is a rising number of people worrying about the baddies. Mosley’s
job is increasingly to persuade the public he, and Palantir, are not among
them.

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