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Emily Darlington

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Emily Darlington
Official portrait, 2024
Member of Parliament
for Milton Keynes Central
Assumed office
4 July 2024
Preceded byConstituency established
Majority7,291 (15.3%)
Personal details
Born
London, England
PartyLabour

Emily Catrin Darlington is a British Labour Party politician who has been Member of Parliament for Milton Keynes Central since 2024.[1]

Early life and career

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Darlington was born at St Thomas' Hospital in London, England. She emigrated to Canada with her father when young, spending summers in south Wales. She returned to the United Kingdom in c. 2000.[2]

She has worked in international development,[3] including as a volunteer and board member of a Kenyan charity working to alleviate poverty.[citation needed] In her maiden speech she talked about her "passion for international development".[2]

She co-founded the strategic communications consultancy, Aequitas, which she stepped down from in 2013.[4]

Political career

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In the 2015 general election, Darlington stood for Milton Keynes North, coming second.[5] In 2018, she won a by-election for Milton Keynes Council[6] and later became deputy leader of the Labour group.[7]

She is part of the White Ribbon Campaign.[8]

On 24 July 2024, Darlington made her maiden speech in the House of Commons during a debate on education and opportunity.[2]

In November 2024, Darlington voted in favour of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, which proposes to legalise assisted dying.[9]

Technology and digital sovereignty

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Darlington has been a prominent advocate for UK digital and technology sovereignty, arguing that dependence on foreign technology firms poses risks to national security and economic growth. In a Westminster Hall debate in March 2026, which she secured, she defined technology sovereignty as encompassing "UK ideas... UK inventors and it is UK based, but it is also about UK values," including adherence to domestic data protection laws and British Standards Institution (BSI) standards.[10] She argued that growing technology monopolies were "buying up and squishing out UK inventions, growth and companies," and called for the government to invest in quantum technologies and to ensure UK firms win public sector contracts.[11] Darlington raised specific concerns about the Ministry of Defence awarding contracts to Palantir, noting that the company's AI security expert had stated that "the market for military AI does not pause for ethics," and arguing that firms which feel they are too big to follow national law should not be trusted with government contracts.[12] She also questioned the safety of relying on Elon Musk's Starlink satellite service for emergency communications, warning that it could be disabled by a hostile actor.[13]

During the Second Reading of the Cyber Security and Resilience Bill in January 2026, Darlington argued that sovereign technology, which she defined as UK-owned intellectual property developed by companies paying UK taxes and accountable to UK law, is essential both for fighting cyber-crime and for building public confidence in digital services.[14] She noted that in her constituency of Milton Keynes Central, one in three jobs are in the technology sector, making the area a significant centre for AI and tech services.[15] Darlington criticised the award of a £330 million NHS data contract to Palantir, arguing that using a foreign firm with "questionable alliances" had eroded public and medical trust, thereby slowing the adoption of important health innovations.[16] She called for the government to promote UK solutions such as Crown Hosting Data Centres, a public-private joint venture, across the public sector.[17]

Online safety

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Darlington has campaigned extensively for stronger online safety regulations and child protection measures. As part of her ongoing online safety campaign, she surveyed over 500 14- to 16-year-olds in schools across her constituency in early 2026. The findings showed that 59% had been contacted by strangers online, 38% had seen explicit or age-inappropriate content, and 33% had been bullied or blackmailed on their phones.[18] Describing the results as "pretty shocking," she argued that young people themselves were calling for further regulation, and that the problem was occurring particularly through platforms that adults might not recognise, such as Roblox.[19] She presented the findings in a parliamentary debate on online harm in February 2026, cautioning against implementing a blanket ban on social media for under-16s, which she described as a "blunt tool" that raised "the flag of surrender to social media platforms."[20] She argued that such a ban could isolate neurodivergent and LGBTQ+ young people who rely on online communities for support, and that children would simply migrate to less regulated platforms.[21] Instead, she advocated for age-appropriate content standards and functionality-based restrictions, drawing comparisons with the ratings systems used for video games and films.[22] Darlington has also highlighted the widespread problem of catfishing and online grooming, warning that the majority of grooming now happens online and frequently moves into real-world harm.[23] She has engaged with the Molly Rose Foundation, attending a roundtable hosted by the organisation in November 2025 to discuss safeguards on social media.[24]

Darlington has been outspoken in opposing proposals to repeal the Online Safety Act 2023. In November 2025, she warned in an interview with the Daily Mirror that Nigel Farage's pledge to scrap the Act would effectively "put porn back into children's pockets," and argued that critics of the legislation were failing to consider how online abuse spills into real-life harm.[25] She has also hosted a parliamentary roundtable with the Online Safety Act Network, bringing together civil society organisations to discuss the Act's implementation.[26]

As a member of the Science, Innovation and Technology Select Committee, Darlington has scrutinised major social media platforms and the regulator Ofcom. In a February 2025 committee session examining social media, misinformation and harmful algorithms, she confronted Wifredo Fernandez, X's senior director for government affairs, over the platform's failure to remove accounts posting violent threats and racist and misogynistic content directed at her and other MPs.[27] She read out a message she had received threatening that she would "swing oh so slowly on a gibbet," which had been reported but not removed, and asked whether such content was acceptable under the guise of free speech.[28] She has also questioned Ofcom on the transparency of large and small platforms, the consistency of online and offline content rules, and the extent to which the Online Safety Act depends on platforms' own self-reporting.[29] In a further session, she questioned Ofcom's chief executive on whether the regulator was being placed under pressure by US officials to soften the Online Safety Act, and pressed for greater transparency about such meetings.[30]

AI regulation and deepfakes

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Darlington has taken a consistent position in favour of binding statutory regulation of powerful AI systems. In January 2026, she signed a cross-party letter to Science Secretary Liz Kendall urging the government to strengthen AI regulation following the use of Elon Musk's Grok AI tool to generate non-consensual sexual deepfakes, including images of children.[31] She raised the issue at Prime Minister's Questions on 14 January 2026, stating that "stripping women naked without consent in real life or online is abuse," and challenging the government to enforce UK law against tech giants.[32] She noted that in the minutes after her question, people had submitted requests to Grok for AI-generated images of her, and argued that the episode demonstrated that "we can enforce UK law" and that tech giants will change when faced with determined government action.[33] She also criticised the government's initial proposal to regulate AI through Henry VIII powers contained in the Online Safety Act, arguing that legislating in the same way as for hundreds of years was not adequate for the pace of AI development.[34]

In May 2026, Darlington backed the ControlAI campaign, joining over 100 UK politicians calling for binding regulation on the most powerful AI systems, citing the risk posed by superintelligent AI.[35] She has been part of a cross-party group of MPs, including former Conservative AI minister George Freeman, seeking to amend the Elections Bill to make the creation of political deepfakes illegal.[36] Darlington has warned that existing frameworks leave politicians "dangerously exposed," noting that the Electoral Commission has no remit online and that the Online Safety Act does not cover elections, leaving a regulatory gap that Ofcom has not prioritised.[37] She has argued that momentum for action is building across the House and that protecting democracy from AI-generated misinformation is a matter of urgency.[38]

References

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  1. "Milton Keynes Central". General Election 2024. Sky News. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
  2. 1 2 3 Emily Darlington (24 July 2024). "Education and Opportunity". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Vol. 752. United Kingdom: House of Commons. col. 753–756.
  3. "Israel and Gaza, Volume 752: debated on Friday 19 July 2024". Hansard. 19 July 2024.
  4. "Termination of appointment of Emily Thomas as a director". Companies House. 11 September 2024.
  5. "Emily Darlington 'will not stand' for Labour in Milton Keynes North". MKFM. 19 April 2017.
  6. "Emily Darlington (Labour) wins Bletchley East by-election". MKFM. 20 July 2018. Retrieved 10 July 2024.
  7. Murrer, Sally (26 July 2022). "This is the local Labour candidate who hopes to topple Milton Keynes MP Iain Stewart at the next general election". Milton Keynes Citizen. Retrieved 10 July 2024.
  8. Issimdar, Mariam (7 July 2024). "Who are the MPs representing Buckinghamshire?". BBC News. Retrieved 10 July 2024.
  9. "Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill: Second Reading". Votes in Parliament. 29 November 2024.
  10. Hansard (10 March 2026). "Technology sovereignty". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  11. Hansard (10 March 2026). "Technology sovereignty". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  12. Hansard (10 March 2026). "Technology sovereignty". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  13. Hansard (10 March 2026). "Technology sovereignty". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  14. Hansard (6 January 2026). "Cyber Security and Resilience (Network and Information Systems) Bill, second reading". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  15. Hansard (6 January 2026). "Cyber Security and Resilience (Network and Information Systems) Bill, second reading". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  16. Hansard (6 January 2026). "Cyber Security and Resilience (Network and Information Systems) Bill, second reading". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  17. Hansard (6 January 2026). "Cyber Security and Resilience (Network and Information Systems) Bill, second reading". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  18. BBC News (8 February 2026). "Teen phone survey results 'pretty shocking' – MP". BBC News. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  19. BBC News (8 February 2026). "Teen phone survey results 'pretty shocking' – MP". BBC News. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  20. Hansard (24 February 2026). "Online harm: child protection". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  21. Hansard (24 February 2026). "Online harm: child protection". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  22. BBC News (8 February 2026). "Teen phone survey results 'pretty shocking' – MP". BBC News. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  23. "Nigel Farage vow to scrap Online Safety Act would see porn 'in children's pockets', MP warns". Daily Mirror. 11 November 2025.
  24. Darlington, Emily (4 November 2025). "Last week in Parliament I attended a roundtable hosted by the Molly Rose Foundation". Facebook. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  25. "Nigel Farage vow to scrap Online Safety Act would see porn 'in children's pockets', MP warns". Daily Mirror. 11 November 2025.
  26. Darlington, Emily (26 January 2026). "Hosting a roundtable in parliament this morning with the Online Safety Act Network". LinkedIn. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  27. "Milton Keynes MP rants to X boss about offensive posts the platform fails to ban". Milton Keynes Citizen. 26 February 2025.
  28. "Milton Keynes MP rants to X boss about offensive posts the platform fails to ban". Milton Keynes Citizen. 26 February 2025.
  29. Science, Innovation and Technology Committee (20 May 2025). "Oral evidence: Work of Ofcom, HC 918". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  30. Science, Innovation and Technology Committee (20 May 2025). "Oral evidence: Work of Ofcom, HC 918". UK Parliament. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  31. Center for Countering Digital Hate (3 February 2026). "Letter to DSIT Secretary Liz Kendall: Grok investigation" (PDF). Center for Countering Digital Hate. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  32. Sherwood, Harriet (14 January 2026). "Starmer 'won't back down' in fight with Musk's X over Grok AI sexualised images". The Independent.
  33. Sherwood, Harriet (14 January 2026). "Starmer 'won't back down' in fight with Musk's X over Grok AI sexualised images". The Independent.
  34. Darlington, Emily (14 January 2026). "Legislating in the same way we have for hundreds of years isn't adequate for AI". Instagram. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  35. ControlAI (23 May 2026). "We have a new supporter! Emily Darlington MP just backed our campaign". ControlAI. Retrieved 17 June 2026.
  36. Crowther, Zoë (29 December 2025). "MPs are racing to tackle AI deepfakes ahead of the next elections". PoliticsHome.
  37. Crowther, Zoë (29 December 2025). "MPs are racing to tackle AI deepfakes ahead of the next elections". PoliticsHome.
  38. Crowther, Zoë (29 December 2025). "MPs are racing to tackle AI deepfakes ahead of the next elections". PoliticsHome.
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