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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Financial Times says that Democratic strategists are warning our candidates not to antagonize pro-AI groups
Found out about this FT article
Big Techs $300mn election war chest rattles Democrats
https://www.ft.com/content/7529e4cd-e336-4b75-917b-84f91bc48437?syn-25a6b1a6=1
via this article from Futurism:
Democrats Warned Not to Upset Multi-Million Dollar AI Lobbyists, Even Though Itd Be a Slam Dunk With Voters
https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/democrats-ai-voters
The text Futurism put above its headline labels this "political malpractice" - and I agree.
From Futurism:
Specifically, the Democratic establishment is telling politicians to play nice with any pro-AI group with over $300 million to toss around, evidently in an effort to court that money for the political machine. So far, only a small handful of progressive Democrats have made AI regulation a key part of their platform, as the majority of party functionaries bite their tongues.
You are definitely seeing a chilling effect [on campaigns], Alex Jacquez, former White House advisor and head of policy at Groundwork Collaborative told the FT. Theres just not a lot of upside in the potential of getting $20mn [spent by pro-AI campaign groups] in your race in a lot of cases it is going to be easier to say nothing.
-snip-
With small towns now pushing back against AI data centers en masse, the appeal clearly stretches far beyond the Democrats typical base. Opposition to big tech has never had a broader constituency, if only politicians would be willing to take a stand.
If Dems think just keeping silent about AI will help them, like prey freezing in the hope predators will overlook them, they're kidding themselves.
The Financial Times doesn't identify most of their sources by name. They refer to "warnings by top party consultants, corroborated by people close to four different campaigns and party strategists speaking on the condition of anonymity" despite internal polling showing voters want tougher regulation.
The FT points out that the pro-AI groups include many of the same people behind the pro-crypto groups that helped defeat Sherrod Brown.
But pro-AI groups have had a mixed record in recent elections.
And the article mentions that pro-regulation PAC Jobs and Democracy, funded by Anthropic, helped North Carolina Dem Valerie Foushee win her primary.
Anthropic just told the PAC it funds that its contributions can't be used to directly influence elections, though - a change that I suspect (though FT doesn't suggest) is a concession to the Trump regime.
FT does quote strategists who thinks Dems should run against the AI industry. And they mention AOC pledging not to take money from the AI industry and urging other candidates to do the same.
But this article suggests the Democratic establishment will try to appeal to the AI industry, citing the pro-business moderates Hakeem Jeffries appointed as co-chairs of the House Democratic Commission on AI.
ColoringFool
(807 posts)Peace with low-murmur audible humming.
Tim S
(263 posts)and go to publicly-financed campaigns.
displacedvermoter
(4,723 posts)Like the retired Wall Street insurance executive who wants to inspire voters to vote for him instead of AOC. Jeezus...
Blue Full Moon
(3,542 posts)leftstreet
(41,056 posts)People HATE AI. Dems need to get rid of their overpaid management consultants
Residents of a St. Louis suburb turned out in droves to unseat four incumbents just days after the council approved a development agreement for a $6 billion data center.
By Jeff Tomich04/13/2026 10:04 AM EDT
FESTUS, Missouri Voters in a small Missouri town, unhappy with the city councils approval of a $6 billion data center, struck back at the polls last week, ousting all four incumbent council members running for reelection.
Tuesdays election in Festus, Missouri a city of 12,000 people along the Mississippi River a half-hour south of St. Louis is the latest example of growing public backlash against cities agreeing to host hyperscale data centers over the objections of residents concerned about their local impacts.
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/04/13/missouri-city-council-data-center-00867259
And ask OpenAI's Sam Altman if he's had any more molotovs thrown at his house.
Blue Full Moon
(3,542 posts)
dalton99a
(94,684 posts)intheflow
(30,205 posts)inside the beltway, circa 2008 mindset. They are absolutely not able to see the present moment clearly and completely incapable of imagining new political solutions for new political problems.
Edited to add: they should be encouraging dissent for AI and data centers, a message that may well not need a boost of dirty PAC money because we can win with a message that says, We stand with The People. Dems censoring ourselves so we dont piss off dark money is literally the reason people think theres no difference between the parties.
malaise
(296,866 posts)That is all