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President Trump's "anti-migrant rhetoric" may be helping the UK's tech industry, according to tech executives.
"If the US continues its foreign policy, anti-migrant rhetoric, it's going to put founders off and operators off," said Husayn Kassai, a founder of the London AI Hub and the chief executive of Quench AI. "Already you have some students that were considering moving to the US [now] considering the UK, and you have tech founders and operators, which are just as important, again increasingly considering the UK relative to the US," he said to Sky News during London Tech Week.
His comments come amid a US political landscape in which immigrant communities across America have been surprised at the speed and ferocity with which new policies, including crackdowns and deportations, have been enacted in Mr Trump's first 100 days in office. In the last few days, some in California - the home of tech hotspot the San Francisco Bay area - have been taking direct action in protest at the Trump administration's actions.
After selling his previous company Onfido for a record amount last year, Mr Kassai decided to found his new start-up in the UK because of its talent pool. "In the US, there's talk of there being more talent, more AI talent in particular.
That's changing because of some of the US politics. "[Also,] in places like San Francisco, there may be more AI talent but it's not accessible to early-stage startups," he added, saying that's because huge companies like Meta and Google are able to offer such high salaries.
Talent is often the deciding factor in where companies move their operations, according to one expert whose job it is to persuade them to come to the UK. Laura Citron, chief executive of London and Partners, said she often talks to international founders thinking about where to expand globally.
"Making sure that businesses feel [...] it will be easy for them to bring international talent into the market, that will always be the most important factor." "Particularly at the moment, with what's happening geopolitically, that fundamental strength of London in openness and being inclusive and welcoming has suddenly really shot up in people's importance," she said. The UK is the third-largest AI market in the world, according to the government, only beaten by the US and China.
Yesterday, Jensen Huang, chief executive of NVIDIA predicted that within ten years, "every industry in the UK will be a tech industry". The government seems to be banking on that, with investments being announced like yesterday's unveiling of a £187m AI training plan for school students and schemes to encourage infrastructure like data centres to be built around the UK.
In January, the government claimed that, if AI is "fully embraced.