The Trump administration may be preparing to take a more direct position in the AI boom
The political logic is not hard to see. AI companies are raising enormous sums, consuming increasing amounts of power, reshaping local communities and creating a growing fear that the gains will be concentrated in a handful of founders, shareholders and technology platforms.
Takeaways
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Washington may be moving from AI referee to AI shareholder.
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A public stake would give political cover, but blur the line between national strategy and private capital.
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Data centres are becoming social contracts: power, jobs and local benefits now matter as much as compute.
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The real risk is precedent. Once the government owns one AI champion, the pressure to own the rest will grow quickly.
The Trump Administration Gets a Seat at the AI Table
The Trump administration may be preparing to take a more direct position in the AI boom, with reports that Sam Altman has discussed handing the U.S. government a potential 5% stake in OpenAI at an implied valuation of roughly $852 billion.
The conversations are still early and conceptual, but the direction of travel matters. Washington has spent years regulating, subsidising and warning about strategic technology. Now it appears to be considering something more intimate: becoming an owner.
For OpenAI, a government stake could offer political cover ahead of a potential IPO, soften resistance around job displacement and data-centre expansion, and align the company more closely with an administration increasingly willing to take direct positions in strategically important firms. The reported model is less conventional industrial policy and more Alaska Permanent Fund: use public ownership of a national asset to spread some of the upside more broadly.
That may sound neat in theory. In practice, it turns the AI trade into something much bigger than chips, models and data centres. It starts to look like a national balance-sheet strategy.
The political logic is not hard to see. AI companies are raising enormous sums, consuming increasing amounts of power, reshaping local communities and creating a growing fear that the gains will be concentrated in a handful of founders, shareholders and technology platforms. A public stake offers a simple answer to an awkward question: if AI becomes the country’s next great wealth engine, why should the public only absorb the disruption?
OpenAI has already floated the idea of a public wealth fund that would give citizens a claim on AI-driven economic growth. Meanwhile, data-centre operators are beginning to experiment with direct community benefits. xAI’s reported “data centre dividend” in Memphis, including Starlink support and discounted service, may be an early signal of where the political pressure is heading. The industry is discovering that local consent has a price.
The bigger issue is precedent. A 5% federal stake in OpenAI would not remain an isolated event for long. , , and other firms sitting at the centre of the compute race would quickly face the same question: should access to power, permits, subsidies and strategic protection come with a public ownership claim?
That is where the AI boom begins to change shape. It is no longer simply a private-market race to build the largest model or secure the most GPUs. It becomes a contest over who owns the productive assets of the next economic cycle, who pays for the infrastructure, and who gets to share in the upside.
And beneath all of it sits the same uncomfortable question now hanging over the AI trade: how much of this extraordinary capex cycle is genuine end-user demand, and how much is an increasingly circular ecosystem of companies funding, leasing and consuming each other’s compute?
A government stake may solve some political problems. It will not answer that one.
