GOP Candidates Break With Trump on Data Centers to Boost Midterm Odds
Progressive lawmakers Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders led the first wave of opposition to data centers. Now Republican candidates around the US are seizing on the fervor even as President Donald Trump actively courts tech titans and promotes the rapid, streamlined expansion of the energy-hungry facilities.

(Bloomberg) — Progressive lawmakers Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders led the first wave of opposition to data centers. Now Republican candidates around the US are seizing on the fervor even as President Donald Trump actively courts tech titans and promotes the rapid, streamlined expansion of the energy-hungry facilities.
Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada.
- Exclusive articles from Barbara Shecter, Joe O'Connor, Gabriel Friedman, and others.
- Daily content from Financial Times, the world's leading global business publication.
- Unlimited online access to read articles from Financial Post, National Post and 15 news sites across Canada with one account.
- National Post ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on.
- Daily puzzles, including the New York Times Crossword.
Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada.
- Exclusive articles from Barbara Shecter, Joe O'Connor, Gabriel Friedman and others.
- Daily content from Financial Times, the world's leading global business publication.
- Unlimited online access to read articles from Financial Post, National Post and 15 news sites across Canada with one account.
- National Post ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on.
- Daily puzzles, including the New York Times Crossword.
Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience.
- Access articles from across Canada with one account.
- Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments.
- Enjoy additional articles per month.
- Get email updates from your favourite authors.
Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience.
- Access articles from across Canada with one account
- Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments
- Enjoy additional articles per month
- Get email updates from your favourite authors
Sign In or Create an Account
The divide within the GOP months before the crucial midterm elections comes as the $725 billion data center rush helps drive up utility bills as much as 267% and otherwise upends American life. Less than a third of Americans approve of the fast pace of construction and most would oppose building a data center in their own community, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released in June.
Since December, 25 federal and gubernatorial candidates have run ads either promoting their own opposition to data centers or slamming their opponent for supporting these complexes, according to a Bloomberg News analysis of campaign ads across streaming, television, Facebook and Google. Twelve — nearly half — are Republicans.
Get the latest headlines, breaking news and columns.
By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc.
A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder.
The next issue of Top Stories will soon be in your inbox.
We encountered an issue signing you up. Please try again
“We’re seeing this play out on both sides,” said Clifford Young, chair of Ipsos Public Affairs and Strategic Insights. “Americans believe the system is broken. Republicans tend to be more anti-establishment today than Democrats, so this is an easy softball in this electoral cycle.”
Some Republicans, like Trump ally and Florida governor candidate Byron Donalds, are trying to take a middle-of-the-road approach more in line with the president’s views.
Donalds, in an ad run by a political action committee supporting him, pledged to ensure data centers don’t drive up utility rates. The proposal mirrors a Trump-backed voluntary commitment signed by the biggest tech companies to secure their own electricity for data centers to avoid spiking peoples’ utility bills.
Others are drawing a harder line more reflective of the total moratorium pushed by Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez. Chuck Gray, a Republican running for Wyoming’s sole House seat, bills himself as the state’s protector against “big tech billionaires.”
“In Congress, I’ll stop data centers,” Gray promises over footage of him driving a pickup truck across untouched expanses of land. “If Silicon Valley wants to build their liberal empire, they can do it somewhere else.”
Republican candidates from Georgia to Nevada have taken a similar tack. In Wisconsin, GOP gubernatorial hopeful Tom Tiffany is airing an ad where he stands next to a cow and pledges to stop “big data from bulldozing our farmland.”
AI barely registered as a significant issue for voters during the last election cycle just two years ago. But in the run-up to November’s midterms, it’s become a central theme.
Aside from grappling with the effects of the rapid proliferation of data centers from coast to coast, fears are mounting over AI-related job loss. So-called deepfakes have shifted from a novelty — like clips showing Joe Biden and Trump eating ice cream on a park bench — to an increasingly sophisticated and ubiquitous element of campaigning. Meanwhile, Silicon Valley has become one of the biggest financial forces in the midterms as dueling super political action committees backed by tech billionaires and AI companies spend millions to elect candidates aligned with their agenda.
Candidates not benefiting from the infusion of AI cash are hitting back at their more industry-friendly opponents on the campaign trail and in ads, with mixed outcomes.
Two anti-data center ads this cycle — one in Montana and another in Texas — came from candidates whose opponents are backed by the pro-AI super PAC Leading the Future, which is funded by AI billionaires including OpenAI President Greg Brockman and venture capitalist Marc Andreessen. Their anti-data center efforts, however, were ultimately unsuccessful as their message was dwarfed by the hundreds of millions of AI spending in the races. Those ads linked the AI-backed candidates to the data center buildout.
Meanwhile, two Republican gubernatorial candidates in South Carolina and Michigan who tapped into voter frustrations on data centers either lost their primary or dropped out.
The issue is also cropping up in Ohio, a data center hotspot. Democratic Senate candidate Sherrod Brown, who lost his seat in 2024, is on the offensive against AI in his campaign to return to Congress. On July 7, he began running ads deriding his opponent, Republican Senator Jon Husted, as the “face of data centers in Ohio.” Husted is not backed by either of the AI super PACs.
“Jon Husted spent years aggressively recruiting data centers to the state, cutting sweetheart tax deals and fast tracking approvals, while ordinary residents watched their electricity bills explode,” says the voiceover, highlighting local reporting on Husted’s data center deals. “Jon Husted, who’s he really working for?”
Just as AI has rapidly reshaped the political battlefield, many candidates are betting voter frustrations with utility prices and fears of job losses will soon resonate.
“Data centers are like a bogeyman,” said Young with Ipsos. “They represent, in peoples’ mind, an unfettered elite that does whatever it wants and rigs the system to their benefit.”





















