Dowden guarantees UK elections will be safe from Chinese cyber attacks
Oliver Dowden said he could guarantee the elections this year would be safe from Chinese cyber attacks and insisted UK national security would not be put at risk by Chinese-made smart vehicles.
The Deputy Prime Minister said the local elections in May and the general election later in 2024 “will be safe and secure”, after earlier formally blaming Beijing for an attack on the Electoral Commission which exposed the personal data of 40 million voters.
In a statement to the House of Commons, he announced sanctions on two people and an entity associated with Chinese state-linked hacking group APT31.
I can guarantee that our electoral processes will be safe and secure
Speaking to the PA news agency later on Monday, he expressed confidence the electoral process would be safe from Chinese espionage.
Mr Dowden said: “Yes, I can guarantee that our electoral processes will be safe and secure.
“That is not to say there isn’t an increasingly hostile landscape against which all elections around the world are being conducted.”
He added that “it’s precisely because we’re in this year of elections when we face this heightened risk from malign actors” such as China, acting in co-operation with states including Russia, Iran and North Korea, that it is important that “nations that believe in democracy, openness, the rule of law stand together”.
Pressed on why the action was only being taken now, when the Electoral Commission attack was identified in October 2022, the Deputy Prime Minister said it was important to have “a robust evidence base” and a “united and concerted front” with the United States.
The UK’s increased pressure on China came amid similar action from the US, which indicted several Chinese individuals accused of malicious