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Tackling State Threats Bill

Lifecycle: Implementation Competition and Markets Authority · Crown Prosecution Service · Home Office Last regenerated 50 minutes ago

Summary

What this is

A King's Speech 2026 Bill announced by the Labour Government to tackle the growing threat from foreign state entities and their proxies, building on the National Security Act 2023 framework and the Foreign Influence Registration Scheme that commenced in 2025.

Why it matters

The Bill responds to escalating hostile state activity (espionage, foreign interference, sabotage, disinformation) and follows operational evidence of STPIM use and prosecutions tied to Iran and China; it will extend or amend the existing state-threats statute book, with implications for businesses caught by FIRS, universities, and entities subject to investment controls under the NSI Act.

Current status

Pre-legislative scrutiny stage: the Bill was announced in the King's Speech 2026 but has not yet been introduced. In parallel, the NSA 2023 FIRS commenced on 1 July 2025 via SI 2025/674 with Iran and Russia specified under the enhanced tier, and STPIM quarterly reporting continues.

What changed recently

  • 13 May 2026 — King's Speech 2026 announces the Tackling State Threats Bill.
  • 29 Apr 2026 — Security Minister WMS reports STPIM use for the quarter 20 Dec 2025 – 19 Mar 2026 under NSA 2023 s.55.
  • 26 Mar 2026 — Home Office announces longer maximum sentences for espionage offences as part of national-security sentencing reforms.
  • 12 Mar 2026 — Government publishes response to the NSI Act Notifiable Acquisition Regulations consultation, signalling scope changes to the mandatory regime.
  • 9 Feb 2026 — MI5 and intelligence agencies provide rare briefings to Vice Chancellors and political parties on foreign interference; new HE guidance issued.

Key documents

Framework

Operationalising

Implementation

Scrutiny

Evidence

Commentary

Review

Consultations

Stakeholders

Sponsoring department 1

  • Home Office → src
    Lead department for state-threats legislation; sponsoring the Tackling State Threats Bill, FIRS implementation SIs and the quarterly STPIM WMSs.

Sponsoring minister 5

  • Dan Jarvis → src
    Then Minister of State for Security at the Home Office when he signed the four quarterly STPIM WMSs (most recently HCWS1550 on 29 April 2026 covering 20 Dec 2025–19 Mar 2026); also fronted Commons exchanges on hostile-state-activity prosecution. Current status historical — treat as not necessarily s
  • Lord Hanson of Flint → src
    Then Minister of State at the Home Office when he repeated the four quarterly STPIM WMSs in the Lords (HLWS1557 on 29 April 2026); moved FIRS designation and exemptions SIs in Grand Committee on 5 June 2025. Current status historical.
  • Shabana Mahmood → src
    Then Home Secretary when she laid the Independent Reviewer of State Threats Legislation's 2024 report before Parliament (HCWS1179, 16 December 2025). Current status historical.
  • Darren Jones → src
    Then Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister when he signed HCWS1394 (12 March 2026) publishing the Government response to the NSI Act Notifiable Acquisition Regulations consultation. Current status historical.
  • Baroness Anderson of Stoke-on-Trent → src
    Then Parliamentary Secretary in the Cabinet Office when she repeated the NSI Notifiable Acquisition Regulations WMS in the Lords (HLWS1399, 12 March 2026). Current status historical.

Regulator / delivery programme 4

  • MI5 (Security Service) → src
    Delivered rare briefings to Vice Chancellors and political parties on foreign interference (Feb 2026); MI5's National Protective Security Authority issued new espionage and interference guidance (Oct 2025).
  • Cabinet Office Investment Security Unit → src
    Operates the NSI Act 2021 regime; party to the March 2026 MoU with the CMA on NSI operation.
  • Competition and Markets Authority → src
    Counterparty to Cabinet Office in the March 2026 NSI MoU, governing competition/national-security overlap.
  • Crown Prosecution Service → src
    Named as consulted on FIRS design and engaged on hostile-state-activity prosecution; Commons exchanges on prosecutor effectiveness took place on 19 June 2025.

Witnesses & evidence-givers 2

  • Jonathan Hall KC (Independent Reviewer of State Threats Legislation) → src
    Prepared the first annual report on the operation of state-threats legislation in 2024, laid in Parliament on 16 December 2025.
  • Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament → src
    Recommended a foreign-agent registration scheme in its 2020 Russia Report; the foundational ISC recommendation that produced FIRS and underpins the new Bill.

Commentator 2

  • Rachel Taylor → src
    Labour MP — tabled oral question on resilience against foreign interference (Commons, 5 March 2026).
  • Wera Hobhouse → src
    Liberal Democrat MP — tabled oral question on securing democratic processes from foreign interference (Commons, 6 March 2025).

Other 3

  • Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office → src
    Summoned the Chinese Ambassador over foreign-interference allegations (May 2024); issued statement to OSCE on Russian information manipulation (March 2025).
  • Department for Science, Innovation and Technology → src
    Hosts the Counter Disinformation Unit following 2023 Machinery of Government changes; state-backed disinformation accounts for over 95% of CDU referrals.
  • Ministry of Defence → src
    Issued guidance on public access to the Defence estate under NSA 2023 section 5 (prohibited places) in September 2025.

Political commitments

  • commitment King's Speech announcement Labour · 2026 · King's Speech announces Tackling State Threats Bill

    Legislation to tackle the growing threat from foreign state entities and their proxies

    My Government will introduce legislation to tackle the growing threat from foreign state entities and their proxies [Tackling State Threats Bill].

    Why linked: Direct King's Speech commitment that anchors this thread.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Restoring trust in our democracy: Our strategy for modern and secure elections

    Rebuilding our firewall against foreign interference in elections

    rebuilding our firewall against foreign interference and protecting those who put their name forward to stand in elections against harassment and intimidation

    Why linked: Elections strategy commitment that intersects with Bill scope on democratic-process protection.

Open questions & gaps

Pending in the lifecycle

  • Bill text and Explanatory Notes: not yet introduced as of the May 2026 King's Speech announcement.
  • Whether the Bill will create new foreign-power proxy offences or further amend NSA 2023 Part 4 (FIRS scope, sanctions interoperability).
  • Whether sentencing reforms announced on 26 March 2026 will be carried in this Bill or via separate vehicle.
  • Government response and any further specifications flowing from the data-brokers call for views.

Beyond the corpus

Confidence gaps

  • Precise interaction between the new Bill and the NSI Act 2021 mandatory regime (whether new foreign-power-control triggers will be added).
  • Whether the Bill will codify any of the operational disinformation work currently sitting administratively in DSIT (CDU).