“He can make sure A.I.
serves us, not the other way around,” the new 30-second ad from Public First Action, a political nonprofit running the super PAC operation, said. It urged New Jersey voters to contact Gottheimer to oppose legislation that would bar states from drafting rules protecting against AI scams.
Anthropic is following OpenAI’s path in deepening its political footprint. It announced earlier this month it was donating $20 million to support candidates who favor AI guardrails through Public First Action. “We don’t want to sit on the sidelines while these policies are developed,” Anthropic said.
It’s not strictly a pro-Democratic group either: Public First Action is led by Brad Carson and Chris Stewart, a
former Democratic and Republican lawmaker, respectively. It’s already backing Republicans as well. The organization has been running ads for GOP Sens. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee and Pete Ricketts of Nebraska.
An early battleground in New YorkAnthropic’s New Jersey push is only one front in a broader contest for
influence.
OpenAI and Anthropic are facing off through their super PACs in New York’s 12th Congressional District in what’s fast becoming an early battleground between AI giants.
New York Assembly member Alex Bores is caught in the middle of a contested primary to replace Democratic Rep. Jerry Nadler. Bores has been a staunch advocate for more guardrails on AI. He was also chief architect of a set of state AI regulatory laws.
Public First Action’s Democratic arm jumped into the race last week with $450,000 to back up Bores. Leading the Future has spent $1.1 million in TV ads and other messages attempting to defeat him so far.
“I think these Trump mega-donors who are attacking me are terrified of having someone in Congress that's already beaten them,” Bores said last week in a CNN
interview.
Leading the Future — a pro-AI super PAC backed by OpenAI co-founder Greg Brockman and investment firm Andreessen Horowitz — has committed to spending more than $100 million in this year’s federal races.
Brockman said last month he and his wife Anna wanted to ensure a “constructive dialogue” between the federal government and the tech sector. “Being pro-AI does not mean being anti-regulation. It means being thoughtful,” Brockman said.
There are already
signs of a scorched-earth campaign taking root. Leading the Future was quick to trash its rival super PAC after their endorsement of Gottheimer.
“This is Sam Bankman-Fried 2.0 with the same people, with the same funding, advancing the same self-serving agenda,” the group wrote in a social media post, referring to the disgraced
ex-crypto mogul serving 25 years in jail for fraud related to the FTX crypto firm collapse.
AI firms, executives and entities with ties to the industry poured $83 million in federal elections last year, according to The New York Times. That figure could easily double this year.
Leading the Future has already signaled it’s expecting at least $50 million more from the Brockmans and Andreessen Horowitz in the first quarter of this year. Their pro-AI efforts could cause some lawmakers to soften their AI stances in fear of inviting a flood of campaign spending against them. Former Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio lost his 2024 re-election bid in part due to crypto interests mobilizing against him.
“The fear of being tagged with AI or tech attacks may deter some policymakers from
taking stances that would be considered a regulatory burden to tech companies,” Alex Jacquez, an ex-Biden aide who is now chief of policy at the left-leaning Groundwork Collaborative, told Quartz.
If that dynamic takes hold, the fight over AI policy may be decided as much by campaign cash and political muscle as by the technology’s risks or benefits.
— Joseph Zeballos-Roig
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