/AI1d ago

OpenAI distances itself from a political action committee funded by company President Greg Brockman

The company claims it has never donated to political candidates

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Original post
Andrew Curran@AndrewCurran_#517inAI

OpenAI has issued a statement in regards to Greg Brockman and Leading the Future.

'Over the past year, AI policy has become a more prominent part of political debate, with a growing ecosystem of outside groups working to shape it. Many tech companies have started their own employee-funded Political Action Committees (PACs) or fund existing PACs to shape the public narrative around AI. OpenAI has not. We have not made donations to any super PACs, and we do not have an employee-funded PAC. We also haven’t made any donations to political candidates or campaigns. If our approach changes in the future we will be transparent about it.

Our employees are free to participate in the political process in their personal capacities, including by donating or providing advice to candidates, campaigns, and political organizations. When they do that, they speak for themselves and not OpenAI. But we recognize that this can raise questions about what OpenAI believes, and we want to be clear that these are separate activities.

In particular, there have been questions around Leading the Future (LTF), which has received support from our President and co-founder, Greg Brockman, and his wife Anna. As they’ve stated before, any engagement with that organization has been in a personal capacity, not on behalf of the company. OpenAI does not direct the activities of LTF, or have visibility into their operations.

We want to be explicit: No outside political group speaks for OpenAI or represents our company’s views.

OpenAI’s policy views should be judged by what we say and do publicly, and we should be held to a high standard. We believe AI policy is too consequential to be treated as just another front in partisan politics. Groups that are advocating on AI should be clear about their policy views, be honest about whom they represent, and not use tactics like astroturfing that obscure the real choices facing policymakers and the public. We support thoughtful regulation, rigorous testing of powerful AI systems, strong safety standards, public accountability, and broad access to AI’s benefits. We will keep making that case directly, transparently, and in our own name.'

OpenAI Newsroom@OpenAINewsroom

OpenAI’s approach to AI policy and political advocacy, including how we represent our policy views publicly and why we believe AI policy debates should be transparent

https://openai.com/index/our-views-on-ai-policy-and-political-advocacy/

5:17 PM · Jun 1, 2026 · 31.7K Views
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VIEWS8.5KBOOKMARKS10LIKES131REPLIES3

Yeah, so this is complete and utter bullshit. I continue to think that OpenAI’s support* for Leading the Future is the single worst thing any frontier AI company has done.

*technically “the president of OpenAI, advised by OpenAI’s head of government affairs, donating money he earned from working at OpenAI, in support of OpenAI’s interests, in a way that 100% of DC interprets as on behalf of OpenAI”. Come on, this is not simply a “personal” action in terms of anything except legality.

Andrew Curran@AndrewCurran_

OpenAI has issued a statement in regards to Greg Brockman and Leading the Future.

'Over the past year, AI policy has become a more prominent part of political debate, with a growing ecosystem of outside groups working to shape it. Many tech companies have started their own employee-funded Political Action Committees (PACs) or fund existing PACs to shape the public narrative around AI. OpenAI has not. We have not made donations to any super PACs, and we do not have an employee-funded PAC. We also haven’t made any donations to political candidates or campaigns. If our approach changes in the future we will be transparent about it.

Our employees are free to participate in the political process in their personal capacities, including by donating or providing advice to candidates, campaigns, and political organizations. When they do that, they speak for themselves and not OpenAI. But we recognize that this can raise questions about what OpenAI believes, and we want to be clear that these are separate activities.

In particular, there have been questions around Leading the Future (LTF), which has received support from our President and co-founder, Greg Brockman, and his wife Anna. As they’ve stated before, any engagement with that organization has been in a personal capacity, not on behalf of the company. OpenAI does not direct the activities of LTF, or have visibility into their operations.

We want to be explicit: No outside political group speaks for OpenAI or represents our company’s views.

OpenAI’s policy views should be judged by what we say and do publicly, and we should be held to a high standard. We believe AI policy is too consequential to be treated as just another front in partisan politics. Groups that are advocating on AI should be clear about their policy views, be honest about whom they represent, and not use tactics like astroturfing that obscure the real choices facing policymakers and the public. We support thoughtful regulation, rigorous testing of powerful AI systems, strong safety standards, public accountability, and broad access to AI’s benefits. We will keep making that case directly, transparently, and in our own name.'

10hViews 8.5KLikes 131Bookmarks 10
RETWEETS42

Yeah, no, OpenAI owns this. You can’t simply have a separate legal entity to do your evildoing through and then claim “woah, that’s not us doing it - it’s the separate evildoing legal entity”. More OpenAI employees should be aware of the political stuff their company supports

128dViews 64.5KLikes 689Bookmarks 55