Hello and welcome back to The Best & The Brightest. I’m Leigh Ann
Caldwell.
As all you readers know, Puck sits at the intersection of the corridors of power—politics, tech, fashion, Hollywood, art, etcetera—and so an art exhibit in D.C. is peak Puck convergence in its way. Bonnie Lautenberg, the wife of the late Sen. Frank Lautenberg, has a fascinating show at the Katzen Arts Center at American
University, where she pairs images from famous movie scenes with art that mimics those images. Georgia O’Keeffe’s paintings, for instance, look a lot like Greta Garbo’s tutu in Grand Hotel. Check it out.
Today, my partner Ian Krietzberg, Puck’s A.I. savant, has a deeply fascinating interview with Abdul El-Sayed, Michigan’s Bernie-endorsed Senate candidate, who has released an aggressive
A.I.-regulation plan that includes Big Tech divestiture and a series of “no-goes.” Virtually every politician is forming their own A.I. policy, but El-Sayed has entered uncharted territory. Below, he argues for a tax on corporations that automate work, a breadth of new safety requirements, enforceable international cooperation, and more.
Plus, I have the latest with Graham Platner, and Marianna explores Sen. Mitch McConnell’s mystery
hospitalization. Yes, he’s alive. But we still don’t know what’s really going on.
Also mentioned in this issue: Troy Dale Jackson, Zohran Mamdani, Chuck Schumer, Susan Collins, Laura Loomer, John Thune, Mike Lee, Haley Stevens, Mallory McMorrow, and more.
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- Platner
watch: Graham Platner is a man on an island. Following Politico’s and CNN’s reporting on Monday that an ex-girlfriend of the Democratic Senate candidate from Maine accused him of raping her in 2021, leader Chuck Schumer dropped his (tacit) support. Then Zohran Mamdani turned his shoulder. Sen. Bernie Sanders, one of Platner’s earliest and most enthusiastic supporters, encouraged him to get out of the race after speaking to
him on Tuesday.
But Platner hasn’t yet bowed out and is now trying to negotiate his preferred replacement, according to two Democrats familiar with the conversations. On an internal conference call last night, Platner delusionally made it known that he wanted to effectively pick his successor—a progressive candidate to replace him, should he inevitably drop out. National Democrats are predictably furious that a highly damaged candidate—a notorious sexter with a Nazi tattoo and now an alleged
rapist, who has dabbled in racist and misogynistic Reddit posts—would have the audacity to think he could approve his successor. “Peak arrogance,” one Democratic operative said. (Platner has denied allegations of abuse and rape.)
It’s also bad politics. Platner’s endorsement, even if merely implied, would likely weaken any candidate in the general race against Sen. Susan Collins. Even before the new allegations, Platner’s poll numbers had been dropping. He’d also been
struggling to raise money as some donors grew skittish. In a New York Times/Siena poll last week, he was statistically tied with Collins, but more voters viewed him unfavorably than favorably, and Collins fared a few points better on the same question.
One of those whom Platner would like to see replace him is former Maine Senate President Troy Dale Jackson, who lost the gubernatorial primary last month but has filed paperwork to run for Senate. Oppo research is
already emerging on Jackson, who has a history of opposing abortion rights—a damaging position to take while running against a pro-choice Republican woman in a post-Roe political environment.
Platner has until Monday at 5 p.m. to drop his bid in order for the party to be able to replace him on the ballot. The Democrats would then have until July 27 to name a new candidate.
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| Marianna Sotomayor
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- Mitch lives:
Laura Loomer ignited a viral firestorm in online conservative circles when she posted on X yesterday that a “high-level source close to the White House” told her Kentucky Sen. Mitch McConnell “is officially brain-dead” and being kept alive “by life-support machines.” A day later, we can report that McConnell is very much alive—after being hospitalized almost a month ago following cardiac arrest.
It certainly says something about McConnell’s notoriously
tight-lipped office that it took an additional news cycle to confirm the mere fact that the 84-year-old is among the living. Following Loomer’s post, fringe commentators began blaming Senate Majority Leader John Thune and other G.O.P. senators, without evidence, for being complicit in a cover-up. Sen. Mike Lee didn’t help quell rumors by noting on X, “Many of us aren’t speaking about Mitch McConnell’s condition because we know nothing about his
condition.”
Earlier Tuesday, a Thune spokesperson finally nuked the idea that McConnell was brain-dead, saying that Thune spoke to his predecessor by phone yesterday and had a “lengthy and substantive conversation that covered a variety of topics, including national security.”
Whether McConnell comes back next week is still unknown. That may be a problem for a couple reasons: His votes are needed in the Senate Appropriations Committee to keep pace on funding the government; he is
also chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, which helps oversee federal elections ahead of the midterms.
The episode is just the latest contribution to the growing trend of disappearing lawmakers doing their best to keep the rumor mill turning. Here’s some free advice for Hill offices whose lawmakers go missing for whatever reason: Just
keep the public up to date on their whereabouts, and you’ll spare yourself and your party many unnecessary headaches.
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Abdul El-Sayed, Michigan’s Bernie-endorsed Senate candidate, has released an aggressive
A.I.-regulation plan that includes Big Tech divestiture (you heard that right) and a series of “no-goes.” Here, he talks about A.I. as an affordability issue, the myth of Chinese domination, and the inaction of the U.S. Senate
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Dr. Abdul El-Sayed, the Bernie Sanders–endorsed progressive Michigan Senate
candidate, was no latecomer to that thorny political rose that has recently blossomed around A.I. data centers. In January, he published a “terms of engagement” for data centers, harvesting all the low-hanging fruit that’s had so many people in such an uproar: no rate hikes, community transparency requirements, job guarantees, energy-reliability guarantees, water protection,
etcetera.
In the intervening months since, of course, A.I. has grown into one of the more salient issues of the midterms: Both incumbents and challengers have directly addressed broader concerns around the tech with bills and legislative proposals, even as Congress remains inactive. Last week, El-Sayed inserted himself further into the A.I. political discourse by publishing his “A.I. Under Democracy”
plan—a quixotic proposal that, among other things, calls for all frontier A.I. labs to become public benefit corporations; demands Big Tech to divest from their A.I. businesses; proposes 50 percent public ownership of these companies, complete with annual dividends; and requires that more than half of each company’s board consist of publicly elected
officials.
The plan, which ostensibly traces its roots to a fair bit of Bernie-style economic populism, goes further still in a few of its details. To wit: “A.I. Under Democracy” argues for a tax on corporations that automate work, a breadth of safety requirements, enforceable international cooperation, and a list of so-called “no-goes.” For instance, “A.I. may not deny medical care, autonomously fire weapons, conduct warrantless surveillance, replace human oversight in life-or-death
decisions, or make hiring or firing decisions.”
According to recent polling, El-Sayed has a healthy but surmountable lead over his competition in the Democratic primary, Rep. Haley Stevens. (State Sen. Mallory McMorrow, whom I
spoke to a few weeks ago about her own A.I. plan, dropped out of the race on Sunday.) The primary has attracted around $30 million in outside PAC spending, though it has yet to draw the interest of the major A.I. PACs.
The following conversation has, as always, been lightly edited for clarity.
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“A.I. Is an
Affordability Issue”
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Ian Krietzberg: What have you been seeing and hearing that compelled you to
respond with this plan?
Abdul El-Sayed: There’s not a campaign event that I do where the question of either data centers or A.I. itself doesn’t come up. From young people, it’s the existential risk of not being able to sell your intellectual capital for money on the labor market; for others, it’s what happens when Big Tech comes and pushes a data center onto their existence. Regardless, this is the biggest question facing humanity and our country in the coming decade,
and you’re seeing startlingly little from the U.S. Senate at all, and I want to be able to demonstrate what leadership looks like.
Among voters, is there an issue within A.I. that feels most salient?
Future possibility of work, and then data centers. For folks who’ve been watching this, thinking about how fast this technology has developed over the past three years, there is an existential doom question, but that one feels further off than, I don’t know if I’ll
be able to have a job in the future. I also hear a lot about A.I. for very particular uses—like, I don’t want to be rejected for a job via A.I.; I don’t want A.I. to tell me what healthcare I can’t have via prior authorization; I don’t want A.I. firing weapons. That’s kind of how it shows up.
How do you think this issue stacks up to the major issues that draw voters and swing elections?
A.I. is an affordability issue, full stop. If
you’re worried that a data center is coming to town and there’s no safety around your utility rates, you’re worried your utility rates are going to skyrocket. If you’re worried that there’s no safety around how they use water, you’re worried that your water rates are going to skyrocket, or whether you can get clean water at all. If A.I. is coming for 50 percent of the white-collar jobs, as Anthropic’s C.E.O. suggests it might, then that’s going to be a really big problem for you. If you’re under
40 and you’re worried that you might never be able to afford a home, and now you can’t get a job—again, it’s a massive affordability issue.
It all really comes back to who the economy is stacked up for. A.I. is the expression of economic inequality in technological terms. It’s big billionaires being able to borrow from other billionaires to buy compute from other billionaires to create a technology that is going to take the rest of our jobs to accrue more capital for billionaires.
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“Democracy Is Old Technology”
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You have certain “no-goes” listed in the plan. I’m curious how much you’ve encountered a desire among
ordinary people to find a way to turn A.I. off completely, rather than do it responsibly.
I hear a lot of that, and I honestly have a whole lot of empathy for it. For most of us, all we’ve ever seen with new technology is that it gets used to monetize against us, and A.I. feels like the endgame of that. Now, if folks saw responsible A.I.—i.e., we’re using A.I. to cure cancer, or to design the next generation of medications, or to take on the climate crisis, or to address
our energy issues—I think a lot of people would feel differently about it.
But the experience of having A.I. in our lives now is you hear about a data center being moved into your backyard so you can get bombarded with slop videos, and maybe you might have access to a $20-a-month ChatGPT that hallucinates anyway, and then they tell you this thing’s going to take your job. I understand why people are pissed off. I understand the technology has real incredible use cases.
I also
understand the incentives that are driving the technology into its worst-possible use cases, and I want to address the incentives. While A.I. is new technology, democracy is old technology, and for a long time we’ve trusted democracy to be able to govern the approach we take to technology and the ways we think about where we allocate our scarce resources. And so I want to put A.I. under democracy, so that we get the best outcomes and not the worst.
Regarding China and the A.G.I.
race—
That race we’re being told we’re running.
Yeah, that race. It’s been leveraged by some technologists and politicians as a reason for not regulating A.I.—we’ll “fall behind” if we regulate, and we can’t afford to do so.
To what end, though? We have to feed all our jobs to A.I., and our security to A.I., and risk existential doom so that we don’t lose to China, so that China doesn’t take our jobs and yield existential doom?
How many times
are we going to watch our public policy get eroded, broken? How much are we going to lose at the risk of losing some existential battle to China that they’ve been selling to us in some way or another for the past 70 years? I would much rather make sure that we have good jobs; that people who are graduating can get those jobs; that we don’t inadvertently create a technology that can create existential doom for humanity, for fear of losing some theoretical war to China that China doesn’t even
appear to be fighting.
Are you worried that the A.I. PACs will enter the race?
If you look at the ad spend against me, I’m already at $30 million. How many more attack ads are you going to throw at me? I think people are sick and tired of being told that they ought to believe in the 30-second attack ad on television, and I would much rather be in a situation where I’m fighting for the truth. I want people to know what I want to do when I’m a U.S. senator. If I
don’t succeed in becoming a U.S. senator, that will not have been the worst outcome. The worst outcome is you succeed in [becoming] a U.S. senator, and then you fail the responsibilities over which you were supposed to actually govern, and I am not willing to do that.
People’s lives are hard, and if you’re not addressing both the challenges that make their lives hard right now and the ones that are going to make their lives harder, then you’re missing the boat. Every leader needs
to be super focused on this question of A.I. because it’s barreling down on us faster than we can even know.
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Puck fashion correspondent Lauren Sherman and a rotating cast of industry insiders take you deep behind the scenes of this
multitrillion-dollar biz, from creative director switcheroos to M&A drama, D.T.C. downfalls, and magazine mishaps. Fashion People is an extension of Line Sheet, Lauren’s private email for Puck, where she tracks what’s happening beyond the press releases in fashion, beauty, and media. New episodes publish every Tuesday and Friday.
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An essential, insider-friendly Hollywood tip sheet from Matthew Belloni, who spent 14 years in the trenches at The
Hollywood Reporter and five before that practicing entertainment law. What I’m Hearing also features veteran Hollywood journalist Kim Masters, as well as a special companion email from Eriq Gardner, focused on entertainment law, and weekly box office analysis from Scott Mendelson.
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