AI-generated image for illustrative purposes.

 

The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change (TBI) has unveiled its “Reimagined State” initiative, a sweeping plan to use artificial intelligence and digital technology to reshape the way governments operate and ultimately, to change how people live their lives. The stated goal is to make public services more efficient, less costly, and more effective, but the deeper implications raise serious concerns about privacy, freedoms, centralized control, and digital autocracy.

The proposal calls for AI-powered digital assistants to streamline how citizens interact with government services, AI tools to help civil servants automate casework and routine tasks, and a “National Policy Twin,” a data platform designed to simulate policy outcomes and guide decision-making.

The TBI has already implemented this alleged aid to government decision-making in Albania’s parliament. In September 2025, Prime Minister Edi Rama appointed Diella as Minister of State for Artificial Intelligence, making it the world’s first AI to hold a cabinet-level position.

But the role of the AI minister, named Diella, is not to aid in decision-making but to actually make decisions, because, as Diella said in her introductory speech, the problem of the past has not been machines but rather the poor decision-making of humans. TBI will now save us from ourselves by controlling us with technology.

TBI argues that the digital transformation of the reimagined state is necessary to solve the UK’s fiscal crisis, declining public services, and stagnant economy. Embedded within this vision, however, is a plan to make government data fully interoperable across departments and to implement a nationwide digital ID system, an infrastructure that would give the state unprecedented access to personal information.

Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, who leads the institute, has called digital ID an “essential part of modern digital infrastructure.” Under his plan, each citizen would be assigned a single digital identifier linking personal health, tax, welfare, and immigration records. More alarmingly, such a system could give the state the power to track citizens and exclude them from services as punishment.

Bank accounts could be frozen, access to air travel restricted, and movement monitored through electronic toll systems. Since the same global advocates are pushing for electric vehicles, the ability to charge one’s car could also be suspended. In effect, an individual’s mobility and financial access could be controlled from a central government computer system.

Policies like the Green New Deal could be enforced digitally by cutting off electricity or water once monthly limits are exceeded, or by canceling flights after a person’s air travel pollution credits run out. Critics warn that Tony Blair’s “Future of Britain” and “Reimagined State” initiatives are not mere modernization efforts but blueprints for a global technocratic system. By linking digital identity systems, central bank digital currencies, and cross-border data networks, the Tony Blair Institute (TBI) promotes a framework that could enable digital totalitarianism, where access to essential services depends on government approval. What Blair describes as “a little work of persuasion” toward modernization, is the normalization of mass surveillance and centralized control over private life.

The ideological roots of Blair’s vision can be traced to Anthony Giddens’ “Third Way” and the Fabian socialist tradition, which combine state intervention with market efficiency under the rhetoric of innovation and progress. The outcome is a form of “soft totalitarianism” that trades freedom for the illusion of efficiency, replacing democratic governance with algorithmic management and risking the creation of an “algorithmic empire” in which humanity serves technology rather than the reverse.

The TBI “earned autonomy” model is a system in which AI gradually takes over government decision-making with decreasing human oversight as it “proves its accuracy.” At the same time, the “close coordination” plan mandates partnerships with major corporations such as Microsoft, Google, and Amazon.

Tony Blair’s technocratic vision is rooted in the ideological framework of the Fabian Society and Anthony Giddens’ “Third Way.” A long-time member of the Fabian Society, a British socialist organization founded in 1884 that advocates gradual, democratic socialism. In his 1998 book The Third Way, Giddens sought to modernize social democracy by promoting “a passionate commitment to social justice” while adapting government to social and technological change.

Blair described himself as “a particular follower of the ideas and writings of Giddens,” who, as director of the London School of Economics and a close adviser, provided the theoretical foundation for New Labour’s agenda.

This managerial philosophy evolved into a technocratic ideology that prioritizes control and compliance over freedom and autonomy. Giddens wrote that “the overall aim of Third Way politics should be to help citizens pilot their way through the major revolutions of our time,” implying that government should guide and shape social behavior rather than allow individuals to adapt independently. He also argued that welfare institutions should promote “psychological as well as economic benefits,” effectively advocating state-driven behavioral management.

Economist Robert Higgs dismissed the Third Way as “an ill-disguised Second Way, a sugar-coated despotism for those who think slaves can be coaxed into loving their masters.” Others note that Blair’s tenure was marked by expanded surveillance powers and the growth of the security state, a continuation of the Fabian ideal of gradual, reformist transformation through centralized planning.

With the backing of powerful globalist partners such as the Gates Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, UN agencies, and the Saudi government, TBI now promotes data-driven governance in more than 30 countries, including 14 in Africa with a combined population of over 460 million. The institute has partnered with authoritarian regimes such as Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, and Azerbaijan, as its neoliberal agenda aligns more closely with centralized power than with democratic reform.

In 2023, TBI provided technology-related support to 62 percent of its portfolio countries and launched advisory operations in eight new ones. The concept of the “Reimagined State” is explicitly presented as “a model that any country can adopt.”

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