Cyber Security and Resilience (Network and Information Systems) Bill Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateAnneliese Dodds
Main Page: Anneliese Dodds (Labour (Co-op) - Oxford East)Department Debates - View all Anneliese Dodds's debates with the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport
(3 days, 5 hours ago)
Commons ChamberI wish you, Madam Deputy Speaker, all parliamentary staff and all Members in this Chamber a very happy new year.
It is a real pleasure to rise to speak in favour of this crucial Bill, which I am pleased to see having its Second Reading. It is also a pleasure to follow the hon. Member for Exmouth and Exeter East (David Reed), who set out many of the stakes that are so critical here. We also heard that in the opening speech by my right hon. Friend the Minister for Digital Government and Data, who described a number of disturbing cases, as others have done during the debate. He also set out the scale of the impact of cyber-attacks with some concerning figures, as did my hon. Friend the Member for Warwick and Leamington (Matt Western). I was particularly struck by the 0.5% hit to GDP from cyber-attacks and the fact that our country has been the third most severely impacted worldwide by cyber-attacks. It is therefore welcome that the Bill focuses on a faster and more joined-up approach to deter and deal with cyber-attacks.
I believe that that approach has gone alongside a really strong grip from the new Government on the need for a sectoral approach to dealing with cyber-attacks. Of course, we unfortunately had to see that, given the attack on JLR. I was pleased to see the previous Secretary of State really engaging with the automotive sector—work that has been continued by the current Secretary of State—on the challenges and lessons that need to come out of that attack, which has been particularly important in my constituency given the significance of BMW Cowley for employment in Oxford East.
I believe it is critical that we assess cyber-security alongside other forms of cyber-criminality, as the head of MI5 has argued for us to do. Cyber-attacks are increasingly being carried out by quasi-non-state actors that operate in the grey zone that the right hon. Member for Hertsmere (Sir Oliver Dowden) talked about, often implicitly backed by Russia or other adversaries. Those attacks are taking place at the same time as a rise in cryptocurrency laundering and disinformation operations.
I am sadly forced to share the assessment of GLOBSEC, the security-focused think-tank, that the pattern of Russia’s hybrid war
“has persisted without an effective Western response”.
There has been an escalation in cyber-attacks, sabotage, disinformation and political interference, but we have not seen the kind of joined-up approach across like-minded democracies that is needed. I was assured recently by my right hon. Friend the Paymaster General that the Government are working with the EU on combating foreign interference. That work clearly needs to be intensified, especially when we see what is happening to other democracies not so very far away from us.
I saw the threat for myself directly in Moldova, where cyber-criminals’ methods are often being used in combination: a cyber-attack on the election regulator coincided with a disinformation campaign sponsored by Russia and disruptions like bomb hoaxes in real life. So while I welcome this legislation, it must be co-ordinated with broader work to protect our country’s resilience and digital sovereignty, and to secure transparency on foreign interference.
In that regard, I will end by mentioning a concerning development: the sanctioning of two British citizens by the United States over the Christmas period, both of whom have worked to deliver transparency, including on foreign interference—clearly relevant to this Bill. Imran Ahmed is from the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, whose dispassionate, evidence-based analysis has uncovered the spread of disinformation, violent racism and material that poses harms to children. Clare Melford is from the Global Disinformation Index, which provides information about the extent of polarisation and disinformation so that companies can make informed choices about where to advertise—a free market approach to providing transparency.
The Minister stated at the beginning of this debate that when national security is on the line, we must be ready to act, and I strongly agree. A number of Members in the Chamber have said how important it is that we have a cross-economy and cross-society approach to these issues. I believe that the sanctioning of these individuals risks chilling transparency, including potentially transparency that can uncover foreign interference. I hope the Government will resist all attempts to reduce transparency. The welcome efforts in this Bill on cyber-resilience must be accompanied by work to counter other cyber and information-related threats to our national digital sovereignty and, more broadly, threats to our national security and interest.