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How AI Is Rewriting U.S. Policy

The concept of politics is traditionally defined as this: the process of making regulatory decisions for a specific area, often involving governmental leaders and parties in order to influence power and control.


If you are an American citizen, most likely you’ve been a part of politics someway, somehow. Maybe you voted in the last election or you learned about it in school. Whatever it may be, the act of policy is evident in most of our lives.


Today, politics is changing at quick speed. While once intended to strengthen societal issues for individuals and groups, now it is making its way into the AI market. That means policymakers, regulators, and governments are getting involved in this rapid trajectory, and it is quickly transforming how policy and technology work together.


What is AI in politics?


We know artificial intelligence is the idea of using machines to perform and automate tasks more efficiently. The machines are given large sets of data and information, which are then translated to compute responses and make decisions for us.


When AI meets policy, this refers to the growing use of such machines to shape laws, inform governance, and influence societal behavior. It is the intersection where large language models meet legislation in order to ease operations within the governing space.


Already, AI tools are being used to analyze public opinion, predict voting patterns, and streamline government responsibilities. Political campaigns are testing AI-generated messaging to target voters, while lawmakers are exploring AI to disseminate important information. Across the democracy, AI is changing how political power is managed in real time.


“AI capabilities today are evolving at a pace much quicker than the frameworks and guardrails meant to contain it. Every regulation, every headline reporting on technology impact, every political stance is driving real-world consequences for innovation, competitiveness, and society,” adds Nicolas Genest, Founder & CEO of CodeBoxx.


Even the numbers show this is an evolving shift, although many are skeptical about where this trend is going. According to a Pew Research report, U.S. adults are hesitant about AI’s role in elections, where only about one in ten of citizens think AI will have a positive impact. Both AI experts and U.S. adults suggest they want more regulation when it comes to AI entering the political industry.


What’s at stake?


Yet, with every technological revolution, AI’s involvement in policy comes with high stakes. The machines that can generate quickly can also amplify bias, misinformation, and manipulation. As well, when robots have human rights on the line, there come serious issues with integrity and dignity.


That unstable relationship between technology and politics is the exact dilemma our democracy faces. While the government scrambles to adopt AI in order to stay competitive, they risk a lack of constitutional rights at the same time. If AI can generate propaganda, impersonate candidates, or even sway entire debates, the true democratic process could fall behind.


But despite these downfalls, Genest also points out a potential path forward. Ultimately, he believes this moment is about keeping the people at the forefront so that the U.S. can continue its position in democracy.


He explains, “We must do more in a context of intense innovation to allow the system to govern and anticipate potential threats or unbearable impact to civilization. The human experience and accountability must remain at the center, guiding policy with insightful optimism rather than fear. AI is becoming a global utility, and if we harness it responsibly, it can unify rather than divide.”


Can America keep up?


Since the very beginning, the U.S. has long prided itself in being a place for citizens to speak up, vote, and determine policy on their own terms. But if AI takes the spotlight now, America’s governing body won’t ever feel the same.


As the current era shows us, America must remain vigilant in the age of AI. There’s no question it is reshaping how regulation works, and policymakers must follow the pace so that AI doesn’t define our government but works alongside it.


If America wants to continue driving policy, the race toward AI is the first test. Is America ready to keep up with it?


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