
The lead up to this year’s party conferences was more turbulent than usual - reshuffles, speculation about future leadership bids, and shifting policy priorities set the tone across all the main parties.
Join our Global Head of Policy, Resham Kotecha, for an insider’s debrief packed with analysis of the Labour, Conservative, Lib Dem and Reform conferences. Get the inside track on what was said on stage, what was whispered in the corridors, and what it all means for the year ahead.
This interactive session is your chance to:
- Hear how the latest policy signals and leadership manoeuvrings could shape party priorities when it comes to data and AI.
- Spot what’s missing from the AI and data debate and where opportunities lie.
- Feed into the ODI’s key manifesto asks for the next election.
- Connect with other members and share your own priorities for the year ahead.
If you want to understand the political mood as it shifts and help shape the agenda, this is the briefing you can’t afford to miss.
Speaker
Resham Kotecha Global Head of Policy, the ODI
Resham Kotecha is Global Head of Policy at the ODI where she leads public policy work, along with efforts to work with governments to improve data ecosystems and data policy. Prior to working at the ODI, she worked as the Head of Policy at Wise, a FTSE listed FinTech company, leading policy work across Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
Resham has been a policy specialist for over a decade, working as a Director at UK Anti-Doping, as an economic adviser to an MP and Minister, and as a researcher to a Baroness.
Resham was appointed by the Cabinet Office to be a Social Mobility Commissioner, holding the Government to account on social mobility issues and shaping the Commission's strategy. She serves as Head of Engagement for Women2Win, an organisation working to get more women elected to Parliament. Resham serves as a Trustee of the Fawcett Society, the UK's leading charity campaigning for gender equality, and a Board member at the John Smith Centre, working to promote the positive case for politics and public service.
Resham has written for The Times, the Centre for Policy Studies and Huffington Post and regularly speaks at policy conferences.
She holds a Bachelor’s degree in Economics from Cambridge University and has been recognised as a ‘Global Shaper’ by the World Economic Forum for political work in trying to achieve a more representative Parliament.