Bernie Sanders’ AI Sovereign Wealth Fund Plan

Let no one accuse Bernie Sanders of ducking the big questions. Writing in the New York Times last week, the senator asked: “Will the future of humanity be determined by a handful of billionaires who have promoted and developed AI, with virtually no democratic input, who stand to become even richer and more powerful than they are today?”

We agree entirely that this is one of the most potent questions facing global democracy today. Our book, Rewiring Democracy, surveys the emerging uses for and impacts of AI in democracy around the world and reaches the same conclusion: that the most urgent risk posed by AI is the concentration of power, wealth and control among tech oligarchs.

And yet we reached a vastly different conclusion than Sanders on what to do about it.

The senator points to a once radical but increasingly popular solution: creating a US sovereign wealth fund by taking 50% stock in AI companies such as Anthropic, OpenAI and xAI. The argument in favor of this is twofold. One: it would establish democratic control over the AI companies, giving the government “the power, through its voting shares and an equal representation on each company’s board, to block decisions that hurt our citizens and to push for policies that help them.” Two: it would return a big chunk of the economic rewards of soaring AI valuations to the public, ensuring “trillions of dollars potentially generated by AI are used to improve the lives of all of us.”

We laud both these goals unreservedly.

We wholeheartedly agree that there must be public influence over the development and use of AI, just as we demand the government intervene to ensure that automakers, drugmakers, airlines and other industries balance profitability with public safety and the public interest. And we credit the senator with recognizing that there are more levers for the government to pull beyond the promulgation of regulation to achieve this.

And we also agree that the obscene, dangerous accumulation of wealth among AI companies needs to be disrupted. As OpenAI and Anthropic race to be minted as the world’s latest trillion-dollar AI companies, we should recognize that—whether or not it constitutes a bubble—these staggering market capitalizations represent a transfer of wealth. The flow of money goes from the smaller businesses and actual people using AI, and being subjected to it, to the owners of these tech companies.

That includes the world’s 86 AI billionaires “seeking to maximize their power and profit” aiming to decide the “fate of humanity… behind closed doors in Silicon Valley,” as Sanders said.

And yet, while we do not outright oppose the taking of AI company stock, or of a US sovereign wealth fund, there are better ways to achieve Sanders’ stated goals.

Public ownership of these companies entangles corporate profit and valuation with the public interest. It would incentivize the government to clear regulations, permit the exploitation of workers and users, suppress competition, encourage AI adoption regardless of the responsibleness of the implementation or appropriateness of the use case, and otherwise act on behalf of corporate interests.

After all, if growing, say, Nvidia from its first $5tn in value to its next $5tn also represents a doubling in value of this segment of the sovereign wealth fund, then you can expect the fund managers to support chip sales, foreign and domestic, with the same zeal as the company’s private investors.

This is not an effective way to influence corporations to act in the public interest. In fact, it makes corporate influence on the government more likely.

We should be wary of this possibility because we’ve seen it before. Ownership of substantial stakes in oil companies by the Norwegian sovereign wealth fund, the world’s largest, does not seem to have steered those corporations to pro-environmental policies. Instead, the Norwegian government’s dependence on those companies has inhibited them from taking climate action. Here in the US, public employee pension funds merit the same criticism: the fiduciary duty to generate wealth overwhelms any intention to direct their corporate holdings in the public interest.

A better answer is to separate the two goals. The standard way to share private rewards with the broader society that made them possible is taxation. Senator Elizabeth Warren has proposed an excise tax on datacenters’ energy use. Others have proposed an AI token tax, which has much the same effect.

As to the goal of reshaping AI in the public interest, we have proposed an AI Public Option. The concept is for governments, be it federal or state, to establish publicly developed and operated AI models run by public institutions under democratic control. The idea is not to eliminate corporate AI or to seize it as a public asset, but rather for government to provide a competitive baseline that private AI offerings must meet or exceed to win business—just like the notion of a healthcare public option.

The Swiss have trailblazed this approach. Apertus is a large language model built by Swiss public servants, researchers at Swiss universities, using appropriately licensed training data and pre-existing Swiss public supercomputing infrastructure powered by renewable energy.

While Apertus doesn’t seriously compete with the latest OpenAI and Anthropic models on performance benchmarks, it blows them out of the water in transparency, sustainability and compliance with EU regulations including adherence to copyright. It’s a nascent project, but suggestive of how public institutions can apply competitive pressure for corporate actors to behave responsibly.

Don’t confuse public AI with “sovereign AI,” the notion that every country needs to invest in domestic AI infrastructure. Sovereign AI is often invoked as a marketing scheme for big tech companies looking to sell to governments; it demands public investment without guaranteeing public control.

Sanders is a bold and savvy political operator. So why is he pursuing the sovereign wealth fund strategy when he must be aware of these risks? It may be due to another argument he makes in his op-ed: that the Trump administration and the billionaire owners of AI are aligned to the idea.

It’s expedient to capitalize on rare moments of seeming alignment across diverse political factions, but it also behooves us to ask why the AI billionaires are open to this extraordinary intervention. The answer, of course, is that they believe that for every dollar ceded to government stock expropriation, they will get back more in favorable government policies to protect that newfound investment.

Energy taxation is a straightforward way to make AI companies pay for the social disruption of their technologies. Public AI represents a non-monetary mechanism for governments to shape the development of AI, complementary to direct regulation of private actors, one with a far greater chance of influencing corporate behavior towards the public interest. We urge Sanders and other political leaders to consider them.

This essay was written with Nathan E. Sanders, and originally appeared in The Guardian.

Posted on June 12, 2026 at 7:03 AM19 Comments

Comments

Larry Seltzer June 12, 2026 9:40 AM

This being the US, a taking like this requires “just compensation” (see the 5th amendment).

TheBiggerWorry June 12, 2026 10:28 AM

I think that at the present time, Bruce, we have bigger things to worry about. Anything related to AI is frankly an econonmic bubble, whereas right now the architecture of the internet itself is under threat from the government-corporate complex:

https://dailysceptic.org/2026/06/05/googles-new-captcha-plans-will-create-a-two-tier-internet-only-accessible-to-those-with-approved-devices/
https://www.dedoimedo.com/computers/qr-codes.html

Bruce, could you please speak out against forcing everyone to have an approved big-tech phone simply to be able to access websites. And speak out against sinister “age”-verification plans too, they are very similar in practical senses, all about forcing people to have approval from some government/corporate so-called authority before being able to do anything, thereby unpersoning anyone who wants to use freedom-respecting open-source software.

Thank you

lurker June 12, 2026 1:34 PM

A Sovereign Wealth Fund? in the US of A?
Where the Govt uses Industry’s own money to control Industry?
You must be joking …

Winter June 12, 2026 3:07 PM

When all factories, and industry in genera, can run without people, how will humans earn a living?

What happened to the horses when farms didn’t need them anymore?

Listen carefully to the techbros and their courtiers. They don’t need all these poor people anymore.

If we want to survive, we need to keep these billionaires in check.

Wannabe techguy June 12, 2026 5:23 PM

I always laugh at politicians that complain about “the rich”. Bernie is “only” a millionaire so I’m sure that doesn’t count. “AI” concerns me too. But,government having oversight over anything concerns me. It goes to the old saying “who watches the watchers” especially when LOTS of money is involved.

Ham June 12, 2026 11:38 PM

@ Winter,

When all factories, and industry in genera, can run without people, how will humans earn a living?

There’s always the Amish.

Winter June 13, 2026 5:38 AM

@Wannabe techguy

I always laugh at politicians that complain about “the rich”.

In general, politicians are wont to shower money on the rich. Cooperate welfare is a thing.

But when they want to get the rich to contribute, its unAmerican.

Clive Robinson June 13, 2026 8:07 AM

@ Bruce, ALL,

With regards,

“The standard way to share private rewards with the broader society that made them possible is taxation. Senator Elizabeth Warren has proposed an excise tax on datacenters’ energy use. Others have proposed an AI token tax, which has much the same effect.”

Not only will this not work, we know it will not work, because “Big Tech” is already “not paying tax” or “paying very little tax”.

You can only “tax” what is “within your domain” even though the US trys to apply “Universe Wide Taxation” it fails and fails miserably at it when it comes to International Corporations.

You can see this by the fact that the EU has had enough… but due to original stupidity it can not do the things it needs to do.

The “original stupidity” is that each and every member can veto any policy that is put forward.

We have seen this with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban coming under Putin’s influence.

Likewise we’ve seen Eire (southern Ireland) coming under the influence of US Big Tech.

In both cases “self interest” is before common interest or “social responsibility”.

It’s a point I usually make about individuals such as neo-cons but it equally applies to larger groups such as “towns in counties” or “states in federations”.

As with Eire “the short term gain” has become a “long term harm” in that the current US Executive has cone up with legislation that now it’s enacted is not going to go away.

This is the idea that the US has right of access to data in any part of the world as “third party” records as long as a US entity is “in the chain”.

But also consider the point Cory Doctorow is making about the DMCA and section 1201, and the US forcing it into other nations legislation via “trade agreements”.

You have to accept the fact that “large corporations” have power over nearly all nations that are not equivalent to trade “Super Powers”.

KC June 13, 2026 9:09 AM

The Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) appropriation of AI stock does feel novel as Sanders applies it. Interestingly, the majority of SWF assets are commodity-based: oil, gas, minerals. Historically, they’ve been established in states with a surplus in natural resources, budgets, or foreign currency.

When we talk about democratic control of AI companies, I do have questions on the interests of the people vs. political interference. As noted, giving political operatives voting rights on company boards is not a guarantee of either far-reaching social, or fiduciary responsibility.

I would also consider that to a certain extent it is not just the top echelon of tech oligarchs who benefit from the return on investment in AI. Social security payments for retirees in the US typically only replace about 40% of pre-retirement income. That’s a steep cliff to drop off of without additional resourcing, including from public markets and retirement-advantaged plans.

Many of us may find the study of corporate social responsibility and business ethics particularly enlightening. Stakeholder goodwill, not just shareholder profits, is generally a net positive for business.

https://saylordotorg.github.io/text_business-law-and-the-legal-environment-v1.0-a/s05-corporate-social-responsibilit.html

Rontea June 13, 2026 10:03 AM

In contemplating the proposals of Senators Warren and Sanders, one is reminded of the eternal struggle between concentrated power and the common good. The grandeur of a nation lies in its capacity to safeguard the dignity of its people against the unbridled might of wealth. The call for measures that return the fruits of artificial intelligence to the public—whether through taxation of datacenters or the creation of a sovereign wealth fund—is a testament to the enduring principle that the nation is not a playground for a handful of billionaires.

Warren’s vision of taxing the immense energy consumption of AI infrastructure speaks to a moral imperative: that those who disrupt society’s equilibrium must also sustain its harmony. Sanders’ bold approach, in seeking democratic stakes in the engines of AI, reflects the ancient wisdom that power, left unchecked, subdues liberty.

By pursuing these paths, they echo a call not merely for regulation, but for the renewal of the social covenant—where technology, like all human endeavor, serves the soul of the people and not the vanity of the few.

cls June 13, 2026 10:06 AM

I do not want any municipal or state or federal A1.

If I’m going to get municipal operated infrastructure, I want to start with deploying fiber for communication to every building and dwelling unit.

Along with water, sewer, garbage and recycling service, roads, streetlights, public parks and other recreation facilities, schools, libraries and other public gathering places, animal control, disease monitoring, all the things to make a pleasant safe place to live.

A1 doesn’t help with any of that.

Anonymous June 13, 2026 12:29 PM

In the spirit of Steve Jobs, here’s a reflective comment:

“Technology is powerful, but it’s only meaningful when it serves humanity. We can create the most extraordinary tools, but we should never forget to put something back—to give back to the communities, the people, and the world that make our work possible. Innovation without contribution is empty. Let’s make sure our progress lifts everyone, not just ourselves.”

lurker June 13, 2026 2:20 PM

@Bruce, ALL

There’s another way to “return a big chunk of the economic rewards of soaring AI valuations to the public.”

Toss out all existing tax laws, which are only a way to enrich the lawyers and acountants who wriggle through the loopholes. Establish a Transaction Tax. It’s the only tax needed, a tax on the use of money. When money changes hands, tax it. With modern technology tracking almost all transactions it wuld be very easy to establish and almost unavoidable. Catching ALL transactions would mean the rate could be so low as to be uneconomical to try to avoid it.

It will never happen because it would cause all these false valuations to evaporate. Armies of short sellers and tax lawyers would be on the dole queue. I wonder why Bernie Sanders isn’t pushing for a Transaction Tax. They don’t really still use brown envelopes, do they?

Clive Robinson June 13, 2026 2:29 PM

@ cls, ALL,

With regards what the state as the “insurer of last resort” and guardian of the comman good should do is as you note,

“… water, sewer, garbage and recycling service, roads, streetlights, public parks and other recreation facilities, schools, libraries and other public gathering places, animal control, disease monitoring, all the things to make a pleasant safe place to live.”

These allow people to flow into and participate as part of society with little fear from those with self interested plans.

However,

“If I’m going to get municipal operated infrastructure, I want to start with deploying fiber for communication to every building and dwelling unit.”

Without enforceable safe guards against “authority” and sufficient if not significant punishment against transgressors these are actually a bad idea.

For instance in the UK the Government has a basic plan to force every person to have a verified ID that acts as a gate into such services. Any anonymity safeguards or protections to be stripped and usage banned, and all services of any kind to require verifiable authentication and enforced surveilled usage.

In the US the FCC is starting on step one of the same thing by making all smart devices and phones “user verified” only on the argument this will reduce “Robo-calls” and Cyber-crime, only it does not take much thought to see how that will fail.

Though most do not realise it our freedom to have privacy in communications and thus the way we chose to live is what makes a free society possible.

Control and surveillance of personal communications, commerce/finance, and health care are the ways to enslave society as a Police State or worse

And be assured of one thing there will be plenty of people queing up to don black masks and body armour for the pleasure of strutting around through to shooting innocent people.

Depending on who you ask something like 10-15% of the population would join up and pledge allegiance not to society and the nation but to an authoritarian leader who gives them the job of swaggering, abusing, and murdering people, to keep society cowed, bullied, intimidated, and in other ways in line with the leader and his cohort of “behind the throne” types wishes.

We have after all seen it less than a century ago. A proper historical study of late 1920’s and 1930’s behaviour in Europe, Russia and US, will actually shock most people. Especially as it is what we are almost world wide currently “sleepwalking into”.

Almost always such behaviours almost always lead to conflict and often authoritarian leaders neither survive or die in their beds.

However the “humble servant behind the throne” all to often slips away to start again with another set of puppet leaders.

It’s why Africa has the “Coup Belt”,

https://everything.explained.today/%5C/Coup_Belt/

And South America likewise has revolution after revolution which in many cases are just coups.

All stirred up With Super Powers and Corporates fighting their “proxy wars” and “asset stripping any resources of value”.

In the process an “enemy” has to be fabricated just as talked about in George Orwell’s 1984.

The enemy does not have to be “real” or even “dangerous” hence immigration and religion are all to often the targets.

Especially when a super power like Russia funds crackpot authoritarians to stir up trouble thus give excuses for armed forces to be based there and aid in asset stripping.

With various minor changes the basic “Cecil Rhodes” play book is used to keep entire areas unstable, with the weakest side propped up by the military insurgents, thus effectively under control of the Super Power.

cls June 13, 2026 8:00 PM

@Clive

Thanks for your thoughtful reply.

Re municipal fiber, you said

Without enforceable safe guards against “authority” and sufficient if not significant punishment against transgressors these are actually a bad idea.

Agreed! I apologize for posting to quickly, omitting the punch line in my usual muni fiber proposal, which is the municipality would be responsible for the layer 1 and layer 2 only; ISPs would compete to provide services over the public neutral media. This works very well where it’s been allowed.

… Still have the problems of ISPs collecting and selling user’s DNS lookups, etc etc, but we’re getting technical solutions for these.

The entire “age gating” and “internet driver’s license” thing is not anything that most people would actually want. So we must continue to bring attention to the issue and attempts by legislators to make it happen. If we believe in the power of the people.

After that, the bad guys will keep trying, we can never rest.

Clive Robinson June 15, 2026 6:26 PM

@ Givon Zirkind, ALL,

With regards your comment of,

“Public AI will probably never be as good as private”

In one respect that has been effectively “proven”…

And that is security or more correctly the nasty old “jailbreak” by “Prompt Injection”.

It’s been shown due to the “observer problem” that,

Guardrails will always fail.

So you might be asking what is the “observer problem” well it’s fairly easy to see by thinking about “Shannon Channels” and the assumed hostile “third party”.

You have two “black boxes” the first under the control of the “first party” –Alice– is the “Sender Process” or “Information Source”(TX). The second under the control of the “second party” –Bob– is the “Receiver Process” or “Information Sink”(RX). Between the TX and RX there is a “communications medium” that is now called “the comns channel” in general engineering parlance.

What Claude Shannon did was to give this channel “information based characteristics” that defined the practical and theoretical limits on how much information could be sent.

He left to engineers “the obvious characteristics” unstated as they were assumed to be “already known”. One of which was “noise” in it’s second form. The first being “Natural Noise”(QRN) the second being “Man made noise”(QRM). Because whilst QRN is very amenable to “mathematical modeling” QRM is obviously not. So in most arguments QRN is regarded as “Average White Gaussian Noise”(AWGN) or one of it’s filtered “coloured noises” such as “Pink Noise” (based on the visible light Colour spectrum).

Further QRN and coloured noise can be described by the “channel physical characteristics” whilst QRM obviously can not be as human agency is involved.

What Shannon also did not go into is the fact that the laws of thermodynamics in effect state that the channel must “radiate energy” and that this can have information “modulated on it”. Engineers were aware of this since the Victorian era, and it eventually became known as “cross talk” from the annoying effect in “Plain Old Telephone System”(POTS) wiring.

What Shannon also did not mention though he would have been well aware of it is what we now call “TEMPEST” or “Emmisson Security”(EmSec). As even though it was an obvious effect of the basic “laws of nature” it was “Classified” above secret in the US (Something that came back to bite the US Federal Government Agency the “FCC” when back in the 1980’s the rest of the world was freely talking about “Electro Magnetic Compatibility”(EMC) regulation).

Basically TEMPEST is all about that “information” modulated on that “radiated energy” that would be visible to “third party” –Eve– as a “Passive Observer” (although in practice Eve can be active by injecting signals that can cause “cross talk” hence EmSec is a little more than TEMPEST as taught).

So “as an observer” what can Eve see?

As the TX and RX processes are “assumed” to be black boxes Eve is thus limited to what appears radiated from the channel.

From this it can be seen that one aspect of the “observer problem” is that Eve has at best “partial information”.

We are familiar with this because in encryption we assume that Eve does not know the “Encryption Key” even though Eve might well know about everything else in the TX and RX processes. As first described in writing as Kerckhoffs’s principle. It was later phrased by Shannon as “the enemy knows the system”. That is,

“One ought to design systems under the assumption that the enemy will immediately gain full familiarity with them”.

In that form, it is called Shannon’s maxim.

Thus the security of the system rests on “information unknown or withheld from Eve”.

Now assume the guardrail is Eve and the first party works out a way of communicating information to or through an LLM that Eve is for some reason “not party to”.

One way is to cause basic “substitution” or “obfuscation” within their prompts that either the guardrail can not know about –ie through– or will not be aware of –ie to–.

Whilst this sounds “hard” in practice it’s not as hard as most assume.

Can it be stopped that is,

“Can guardrails be aware of everything?”

The answer is obviously “NO” though the formal proof of that is somewhat –incorrectly– debated, much as the nonsense involved around E2EE and “golden back doors” being “NOBUS” was.

Clive Robinson June 15, 2026 7:03 PM

@ Givon Zirkind, ALL,

Further –as my previous was fetting to long–

Consider the implications of knowing that,

“Guardrails will always fail”

Much is being shouted about about AI regulation and legislation.

There is a distinction between “Good Law” and “Bad Law” and it has many asspects.

Just one of these is,

“Deterministic proof -v- circumstantial evidence / conjecture”

Good laws tend to be at the Deterministic not Conjecture end of the spectrum.

In fact nearly every law I can think of that involves “conjecture through circumstantial evidence” is “Bad Law”.

The subject gets skirted around but basically whilst the legislators desire is for one law, circumstances mean the law is “overly broad” or “too wide in scope” and the results are a almost always a complete and utter mess.

Sadly most current “new laws” fall fairly heavily into this category, as they are made for political / emotional reasons, not clearly thought out and rational justice reasons.

Anywhere you see a “dog whistle” / “knee jerk” argument being used such as

“think of the children”

People should realise that someone for hidden / political reasons, is using irrational emotional argument due to either “cognitive bias”, or “self interest”. So the proposer is in effect either ignorant or malicious, either way no good will come of it.

All currently discussed AI regulation / legislation falls into this “cognitive bias” / “self interest”.

We should thus “step back” as we are “currently to ignorant” and an outright ban will not work (other nation states will go their own way so users just go “jurisdiction shopping”). And by now we all should know how that ends, as the first part of this century clearly shows, the word “badly” reasonably covers it.

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