Senator Bernie Sanders isn't mincing words about what he sees coming in the 2026 elections. On Friday, the Vermont independent warned that wealthy tech investors are gearing up to spend massive amounts of money to knock out any lawmaker who dares suggest that artificial intelligence might need some guardrails.
Big Tech's Political War Chest
Taking to X, Sanders put it bluntly: "Big Tech Oligarchs will spend hundreds of millions to defeat candidates who express concerns about AI and robotics." His message was clear: billionaires "cannot be allowed to buy elections." He's calling for overturning Citizens United and shifting to public funding of elections, citing a Washington Post report that details how tech-backed political groups are mobilizing ahead of the midterms to reshape AI policy on their terms.
It's not hypothetical anymore. The money is real, and it's already being deployed.
When $100 Million Targets a State Lawmaker
Here's where it gets interesting. A super PAC called Leading the Future, bankrolled by prominent tech executives and investors, has accumulated more than $100 million. Their strategy? Support or oppose candidates in congressional and state races based on their AI policy positions.
One of their first targets is Alex Bores, a New York Democratic state lawmaker who sponsored legislation requiring large AI companies to disclose safety data. An attack ad accused him of threatening innovation. Bores fired back online: "AI billionaires, go have fun… We're standing up for New Yorkers." Plot twist: New York Governor Kathy Hochul signed Bores' AI bill into law that same day.
So the super PAC spent money attacking a guy whose bill became law anyway. That's either terrible timing or a warning shot for future races.
Meta Joins the Fight With Historic Move
Meta Platforms Inc. (META) has entered the arena in a big way, launching two super PACs for the first time in the company's history. According to the report, Meta is donating tens of millions of dollars to influence AI policy and prevent what it sees as a problematic patchwork of state regulations.
This aligns neatly with President Donald Trump's approach. He's rolled back Joe Biden-era AI restrictions and threatened legal action against states that try to regulate the technology themselves. But Trump's cozy relationship with Silicon Valley is causing friction within his own party. Some Republicans are warning that getting too close to Big Tech risks alienating voters worried about jobs, energy costs, and data center expansion in their communities.
The political calculus is getting complicated when your base cares about power grid strain and your donors want zero AI regulation.
The Bigger Picture
What Sanders is really highlighting is a clash between two visions of how AI development should work. One side argues that regulation stifles innovation and that the U.S. needs to move fast to compete globally. The other side worries that without transparency and safety requirements, we're building powerful systems with no accountability.
And now that debate is being settled not just in policy rooms but in campaign war chests. When a super PAC can drop $100 million to shape AI policy through elections, you're not just voting on candidates anymore. You're voting on whether tech billionaires get to write the rules for technologies that could reshape the economy.
Sanders has been vocal about this issue before, calling for a halt on AI data center construction and alleging that wealthy tech figures want more power and wealth. His latest warning suggests he sees 2026 as a pivotal moment where money could permanently tilt AI policy in one direction.
Whether voters care enough about AI regulation to resist well-funded attack ads remains an open question. But the spending is coming either way.




