January 15, 2025

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Huawei: PM faces Commons rebellion by Tory MPs over 5G contract

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Boris Johnson is facing his first Commons rebellion since his general election victory over Huawei’s role in the UK’s 5G mobile internet network.

A number of senior Conservatives are set to back an amendment which would end the Chinese firm’s participation in the project by the start of 2023.

Ministers approved Huawei’s involvement in January but capped its share at 35%.

Tory critics say Huawei is an arm of the Chinese state and a risk to UK security – claims the firm rejects.

The government say the Chinese firm will be excluded from the most sensitive parts of the 5G network and that its overall market share will decline over time as new players emerge.

But the US, which has banned Huawei from its own telecoms networks, has been highly critical of the UK’s decision, urging it to rethink its plans.

‘Very concerned’

And a group of Conservative MPs led by the party’s former leader Iain Duncan Smith are pushing for firms classified as “high-risk vendors” by the National Cyber Security Centre to be banned entirely from the project by 31 December 2022.

They say up to 30 Conservatives could rebel on Tuesday by backing an amendment to the Telecommunications Infrastructure Bill. With a majority of 80, the government is unlikely to suffer a defeat.

But in an attempt to limit the size of the revolt, No 10 is reported to have arranged a series of meetings on Monday between MPs – including former cabinet ministers David Davis and Damian Green – and security officials from GCHQ.

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Media captionHow will the Huawei 5G deal affect me?

Whatever the outcome of Tuesday’s vote, Tory MP Bob Seely said it was the “start of a process” about Parliament talking about Huawei’s role in the UK’s mobile telecoms infrastructure.

“The important thing is that, with the vibe that we’re getting from colleagues, many many more are very concerned about it,” he said.

Downing Street has said it will continue to keep the 35% market cap under review and that it hoped to get to a stage as quickly as possible where high-risk vendors were not required.

But at a briefing on Monday No 10 insisted that the government’s leading cyber security advisers were satisfied with the approach and that it would not impact on the UK’s ability to share intelligence with the US and its other leading allies.

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