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The Best & The Brightest
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Leigh Ann Caldwell Leigh Ann Caldwell

Welcome back to The Best & The Brightest. I’m Leigh Ann Caldwell.

I spent the day watching the preparations at the Capitol to welcome King Charles III, who is in Washington to schmooze with President Trump—an unreconstructed Anglophile—amid rocky relations between the two countries. A state dinner tonight at the White House followed.

As he entered the House chamber, the king received a minutes-long standing ovation, a rare moment of bipartisanship in partisan times. His speech was part history lesson and part celebration of American independence from Britain 250 years ago—as well as an attempt to reassure members that, despite the tensions between Trump and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, the bond between the two countries remains strong. But Charles, who is more political than his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, also noted the importance of the European–American partnership, declared that “executive power is subject to checks and balances,” and went on about the primacy of defending Ukraine—subtle but unmistakable digs at the Trump administration.

Tonight, my colleague Ian Krietzberg digs into OpenAI’s attempt to solve its self-inflicted image problems—through, what else, a long list of policy proposals. But can its global affairs chief, Chris Lehane, make the A.I. industry sound more… human? Up top, Abby’s got news and notes on the 38th House G.O.P. retirement this term, plus Democrats’ dreams of the last frontier as they eye a Senate flip in Alaska.

Also mentioned in this issue: Sam Altman, Daniel Webster, Dan Sullivan, Mary Peltola, Dario Amodei, Andy Hall, J.B. Branch, Bernie Sanders, Ron DeSantis, Michael Kratsios, Chamath Palihapitiya, and more…

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The Cloakroom

Abby Livingston Abby Livingston
  • Webster’s departure: Longtime Florida Republican Rep. Daniel Webster announced his retirement from Congress today, citing generational change and the desire to spend more time with family. However, according to a source close to Webster, his decision wasn’t a response to Florida’s brand-new redistricting map, even though he was the state’s loudest Republican critic of the plan—the timing was merely coincidental. (Make of that what you will!) He is the 38th Republican to leave Congress this term—a record. He is also the 15th House Republican to retire outright, without the intent of running for higher office, which are often the strongest indicators that members believe a wave is coming.
  • Alaska’s blue dream: Even though Dems are wringing their hands over the divisive Michigan Democratic primary and girding themselves for more to come out of Graham Platner’s oppo file, they’re increasingly bullish about their next-tier races: Iowa, Ohio, Texas, and particularly Alaska. A few Democratic strategists I ran into on the WHCD party circuit pointed to the 49th state as the most gettable of that next tier.

    Of course, Alaska is a reliably conservative state—its Republican incumbent, Sen. Dan Sullivan, won reelection by 13 points in 2020—and all of the Senate race handicappers rate this one as Lean Republican. Still, Alaska does have a tidy history of electing Democratic senators in wave years—see: Mark Begich in 2008—and candidate quality matters. Democrats, including donors, have expressed enormous confidence in the “political acumen” of former Rep. Mary Peltola, and compared to other states, Alaska’s television ad rates are a steal.

Now here’s Ian…

Love It or Lehane It

With the public continuing to sour on A.I., Sam Altman and his corporate image architect, Chris Lehane, are testing a softer, more human message—less doom and gloom, more uplift and empowerment. Is it too little, too late?

Ian Krietzberg Ian Krietzberg

OpenAI C.E.O. Sam Altman, still shaking off a pair of terrifying attacks on his home in as many weeks, struck a notably softer note during a recent podcast appearance. “There’s a fear with A.I.,” he acknowledged. “Let’s say it makes all this money and does all the work and whatever. Like, what do I do? What’s my kid going to do?” Greg Brockman, the company’s president, jumped in with a similar observation. Most people outside of Silicon Valley don’t understand how they’re going to benefit from A.I., he said. “And I think that’s something that we’re increasingly realizing that we also have to really spell out.”

The industry’s P.R. crisis is, in many ways, a problem of its own creation. For years, Altman and his contemporaries have been warning that the dawn of superintelligence could be an eschatological event with the potential to leave billions jobless—a message that helped A.I. companies raise ungodly sums of capital from investors hoping to squeeze on to the last train leaving the station. Not surprisingly, it’s been less popular with the general public. Poll after poll shows deepening distrust toward the industry, leading to local protests and growing political pushback in Washington.

Now, it appears that OpenAI is trying to sound a little more… human. Earlier this month, the company’s government affairs team rolled out a new policy document, highlighting 20 ideas for “keeping A.I. people-first.” Among the proposals are tax reforms to fund public-safety-net programs, a four-day workweek, and the creation of a public wealth fund to give everyone “a stake in A.I.-driven economic growth.” It’s a markedly different tone than some of OpenAI’s other policy proposals, which focused on playing up America’s technological arms race with China to justify a light-touch regulatory regime.

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Chris Lehane, the ubiquitous political operative and image architect who now heads up global affairs at OpenAI, acknowledged that the company has been working through some of these tensions. “Thus far, the conversation on the social value proposition of A.I. has been overly binary,” he told me. “We don’t think we should just be scaring people,” he added. “We also don’t think we should be telling people that there’s nothing to worry about.”

To that end, this week Altman published a new set of five principles that will guide OpenAI’s work: “democratizing” technological power, “empowering everyone to achieve their goals,” etcetera. Altman painted a picture of a future with “widespread flourishing at a level that is currently difficult to imagine.” None of these new principles will lead OpenAI to stop ramping up its lobbying efforts or staunchly opposing most attempts to regulate the industry. But, Altman wrote, the company is “committed to doing our part to make the future better than the past.” Phew?

Naturally, Lehane dismissed the idea that OpenAI is pivoting its messaging, per se, arguing that it’s simply “the moment” that has changed—that the public is now more receptive to the types of policy proposals that the company is offering. “And no one really has offered them out there yet, and we see a huge opportunity to actually help lead that conversation.”

Public Enemies

I asked Lehane whether he felt any urgency to publicize OpenAI’s new messaging before the politics of A.I. begin to harden—a premise that he politely disputed. “Our urgency is that the nature of the technology itself is going to require transformative policy solutions to optimize for its benefits,” he insisted.

That may be wishful thinking. In 2025, polling from the Pew Research Center found that “near identical” shares of Republicans and Democrats were more concerned than excited about A.I. Only 17 percent of U.S. adults expected A.I. to have a positive impact on the U.S. over the next two decades. Meanwhile, Quinnipiac found that a paltry 5 percent of Americans feel like the people developing A.I. actually represent their interests. Heavy cake.

Meanwhile, public anxiety seems like it’s reached a new and dangerous crescendo, with the attacks on Altman’s house and OpenAI’s headquarters, and an incident in Indianapolis where someone fired 13 shots at the front door of councilman Ron Gibson shortly after the city’s development commission approved a data center project in his district. A note bearing the message “No Data Centers” was left on Gibson’s bullet-riddled front step.

bp
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At times, industry luminaries have compounded the problem by publicly chin-stroking about the civilization-destroying possibilities of their technology. In 2014, Elon Musk referred to A.I. as one of humanity’s “biggest existential threat(s).” In 2015, Altman, perhaps partially in jest, said that “A.I. will probably most likely lead to the end of the world, but in the meantime, there’ll be great companies.” Most recently, Dario Amodei, the C.E.O. of Anthropic, put the chances of things going “really, really badly” at 25 percent. All three have suggested that A.I. could devastate the labor market, with Altman regularly calling for a universal basic income, Musk promising that work will soon be “optional,” and Amodei claiming that 50 percent of entry-level white collar jobs will be “disrupted” by 2030.

“I can’t remember another case like this, where the dominant negative narrative on A.I. and the economy is being driven by the C.E.O.s of the companies themselves. I’ve never seen this before,” Andy Hall, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, told me a few weeks ago. “I honestly have absolutely no idea what they think they’re accomplishing by going out publicly and constantly talking about how they’re going to put everyone out of work.”

Hall was being somewhat hyperbolic—it’s hardly a total mystery why Altman and Amodei have both pushed this sort of doomer rhetoric. “I get it,” tech investor Chamath Palihapitiya wrote in his 2025 annual letter, “Fundraising requires narrative, and we are building God is a better pitch than we wrote some very clever linear algebra, pirated the internet, and threw a bunch of compute at it.” The problem, Palihapitiya continued, is that A.I. “has to be trusted, because low public trust leads to lower adoption and worse regulations.”

Alas, the tech industry’s track record over the past several decades leaves much to be desired. “People will not trust them until their actions start aligning with what they’re saying,” said J.B. Branch, a policy counsel at Public Citizen. “Even these policy solutions that they’ve come up with—does anyone seriously believe that employers are going to cut the work week? Does anyone seriously believe that we are going to, within the United States, find a way to have universal basic income? These solutions are so devoid of realism that it doesn’t pass a sniff test. It’s just, Let’s say some stuff to appease people, but that’s not going to win anyone over.”

That may be true, but OpenAI, like Anthropic and xAI, does need to do something before public sentiment hardens against the industry. Washington, which is currently an ally, risks turning into an adversary if the most dire predictions about job losses come to pass. At that point, voters won’t be reading Altman’s blog. They’ll be surrounding data centers with pitchforks.

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