I recently had the privilege of attending an event at the Prime Minister’s Office to mark a significant step forward in our national AI strategy. We celebrated a milestone for the “Binum” project, an initiative under the GovAI services framework designed to integrate artificial intelligence directly into the work of government committees.
This represents a tangible shift for AI, moving it from pilots and theoretical discussions into the very core of public sector decision-making. It’s important to emphasize that the goal is not to replace human judgment, but to augment it. The AI will act as a powerful capability, helping committees analyze vast amounts of information, structure discussions, and arrive at better-informed conclusions.
As my colleague Merav Peretz Belinsky also noted, this is what building a true “AI Nation” looks like in practice. It’s not just about investing in infrastructure and compute; it’s about embedding operational AI into the very fabric of our national institutions to make them more effective. Seeing this vision become a reality is a concrete step toward a more efficient and data-driven government.