A tech journalist and AI researcher with over a decade of experience covering digital innovations and emerging technologies.
An ex-colonel from the special forces, minister of state Al Carns was this week on manouevres warning that the UK needs to be preparing for war with Russia.
“The threat of conflict is at Europe’s door again. That’s the reality. We’ve got to be prepared to prevent it,” he said, in comments that go beyond previous admonitions by his boss, the defence secretary.
“As a whole society – what is their role if we get caught in an existential crisis, and what do they need to be aware they need to do and what they can’t do, and how do we rally the nation to support a armed campaign?”
It was stark language from the middle-aged born in Scotland MP, who has had an remarkably rapid rise to his role of minister for the military.
Naturally for a politician with a background in the armed forces, there is conjecture about whether he is future leadership material – as with, at various points, other military figures before him.
This time, however, some ruling party MPs think there could be a genuine possibility of Carns being a candidate if and when the opportunity arises.
One of the reasons for that is that Carns has been involved in politics for longer than it seems, as a former defence advisor to three previous defence secretaries.
But there is also the danger of being over-promoted as a politician with a personal history colleagues think will resonate with the public – without enough consideration of whether they have the track record and shrewdness to make it to the top.
Carns was born in Aberdeen, and state educated, before enlisting in the Royal Marines in 1999 at the age of 19. He advanced his career and was awarded the Military Cross in 2011 “for gallant and distinguished services in Afghanistan”.
It came as a surprise when he left the armed forces after 24 years of service to stand as an MP in Birmingham Selly Oak, just prior to he was due to be promoted to brigadier.
And in a sign he was immediately identified as a talent, the prime minister appointed him as a minister for veterans affairs straight after the most recent general election. He was elevated later that year to the more senior role with a portfolio covering all the military.
Chiselled and confident, Carns has been an periodic spokesperson for the government, and has been an effective political attack dog when putting pressure on rival parties over issues of national security.
He has also found time to set a new global benchmark this year along with former military colleagues by ascending the world's highest peak in under five days without acclimating on the mountain, using xenon gas.
His name was floated as a possible future leader in earnest around the time of a leadership election last autumn, when his backers began sounding out MPs about a run for the job. That did not gain traction, with the prime minister's office strongly supporting another candidate.
Since then, feature articles of Carns have begun to appear in the media, with one newspaper presenting him as the “Action Man” that some were trying to stop from challenging the prime minister.
While some MPs think he could be leadership material, others think he is making himself appear overly eager when there is no opening at the top. There is also a apprehension about the rapid rise of a high flyer from outside politics.
“It's not proven that being senior in the military equates to being any good at politics any more than being a top prosecutor,” says one MP. “He is completely untested.”
A tech journalist and AI researcher with over a decade of experience covering digital innovations and emerging technologies.