Senator Bernie Sanders on Tuesday urged the U.S. Congress to impose a temporary moratorium on new data center construction, arguing that the rapid, largely unregulated expansion of AI infrastructure risks deep economic and social harm. In remarks focused on AI and robotics, Sanders framed data centers as the physical backbone of what he described as an unchecked sprint toward automation driven by a small group of ultra-wealthy technology leaders.
In a Youtube, Sanders said AI development currently reflects the priorities of billionaires rather than democratic oversight, naming technology executives including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Peter Thiel, and Bill Gates. He questioned whether the individuals financing and deploying large-scale AI systems adequately consider the consequences for workers and families, warning that further concentration of wealth and power poses systemic risks.
He also highlighted job displacement as a central concern, citing public statements from AI industry leaders who have warned that automation could replace large portions of the workforce, particularly entry-level white-collar roles. Sanders argued that Congress has failed to seriously address how millions of displaced workers would survive without income, while also raising concerns about growing social isolation as people increasingly rely on AI systems for emotional interaction rather than human relationships.
- Sanders warned that AI and robotics could eliminate millions of jobs, citing projections from technology executives and AI developers
- He argued that AI investment is driven primarily by the wealthiest individuals, not by public interest or worker protections
- He raised concerns about social isolation and emotional dependency on AI, particularly among children
- Sanders called for slowing AI deployment to allow democratic processes to catch up
- He proposed a moratorium on new data centers as a first step to pause AI infrastructure expansion
“That is why, for a start, I will be pushing for a moratorium on the construction of data centers that are powering this unregulated sprint to develop and deploy AI,” Sanders said. “This moratorium will give democracy a chance to catch up with the transformative changes that we are witnessing and make sure that the benefits of these technologies work for all of us, not just the wealthiest people on earth.”
🌐 Analysis
Sanders’ proposal lands amid an unprecedented surge in hyperscale and AI-optimized data center investment across the United States, driven by generative AI workloads and accelerated compute demand. While policymakers have increasingly focused on energy consumption, land use, and grid strain from AI data centers, a direct call for a construction moratorium marks a more aggressive regulatory stance than seen so far from Congress, contrasting with current federal efforts that largely prioritize domestic AI competitiveness and infrastructure expansion over restraint.







