New York primary becomes battleground over AI regulation

The Democratic primary for New York’s 12th Congressional District has turned into a high-stakes contest over artificial intelligence policy. The June 23 vote to replace retiring Representative Jerry Nadler features state Assembly member Alex Bores as a leading candidate. Outside spending tied to AI companies has exceeded $20 million.

Bores, a computer scientist and sponsor of New York’s RAISE Act, supports stronger federal oversight of AI. The 2025 state law requires large developers to create safety plans and report incidents involving risks such as automated crime or bioweapons.

Opponents have targeted Bores with more than $7 million in ads from Leading the Future, a group backed by OpenAI investors including Greg Brockman and venture capitalists Marc Andreessen and Joe Lonsdale. Supporters of Bores have received over $10 million from groups linked to Anthropic plus a $3.5 million pledge from investor Chris Larsen.

Other candidates include state Assembly member Micah Lasher, former Republican lawyer George Conway, healthcare researcher Nina Schwalbe, and activist Jack Schlossberg. Bores has described the race as a test of whether democratic institutions can regulate the technology before it governs them.

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Alex Bores speaking about AI regulations at a crowded Manhattan campaign event with holographic AI visuals and campaign finance symbols in the background.
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In Manhattan’s NY-12 Democratic primary, Alex Bores makes AI rules a central plank as outside groups spend heavily

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New York State Assemblymember Alex Bores is running in the June 23 Democratic primary for an open U.S. House seat in Manhattan, arguing that Washington should adopt safety and transparency rules for the most powerful artificial intelligence systems. The stance has drawn opposition spending from an AI-aligned super PAC, while a separate network linked to Anthropic has backed his campaign, adding to a crowded and costly race.

A POLITICO Poll reveals broad U.S. unease with artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency—even spanning 2024 Trump and Harris voter bases—as pro-industry super PACs pour tens of millions into 2026 midterm races. Pluralities see crypto as too risky and AI advancing too quickly, with voters favoring candidates backed by groups pushing stricter regulations.

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President Donald Trump and his administration are pushing a deadlocked Congress to enact a national AI regulatory framework, criticizing state-level laws as a patchwork that burdens innovation. Republican state lawmakers, frustrated by federal inaction, continue passing their own AI regulations focused on child safety and transparency. The White House recently released principles it wants Congress to adopt.

The United States has restricted access to Anthropic’s most powerful models to foreign nationals over national security concerns. The move has triggered unanimous criticism among candidates for France’s 2027 presidential election.

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