Embattled U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is looking for a clear policy win as he fights to stay in office.

The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology’s (DSIT) wide-ranging “national conversation” on growing up in the online world wrapped up less than three weeks ago and attracted more than 116,000 submissions, a level of engagement not seen since the then-Conservative government proposed legalizing gay marriage back in 2012.

89 percent of parents who responded backed a “legal requirement for social media services to be a minimum age of access,” according to a transparency release last week. 

As recently as Tuesday, DSIT official William Jones told a Family Online Safety Institute conference in Brussels that a decision hadn’t been made on exactly what a social media ban for children would look like.

The timeframe has left officials with little time to iron out the details and sets the stage for a furious lobbying blitz over the next month as tech companies scramble to secure carve-outs from forthcoming restrictions. 

The two people cited above who were briefed by DSIT and No. 10 said the government hadn’t yet established which social media platforms will be covered.

Share.
Exit mobile version