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Norms Impact

Meta Begins $65 Million Election Push to Advance A.I. Agenda

Meta’s $65 million super PAC rollout turns state legislatures into an A.I. policy battleground where corporate money can preselect the officials who regulate its own expansion.

Elections

Feb 18, 2026

Sources

Summary

Meta is preparing to spend $65 million in 2026 to support state politicians it views as friendly to the artificial intelligence industry, starting this week in Texas and Illinois. The company is shifting from limited, cautious political engagement to a multi–super PAC strategy designed to influence state-level governing coalitions. The practical consequence is concentrated corporate election spending aimed at shaping who writes and enforces A.I. rules in key states where Meta operates and plans to expand.

Reality Check

This kind of cross-party super PAC architecture normalizes a pay-to-govern pipeline where private capital can pre-load statehouses with “friendly” regulators, eroding our right to neutral rulemaking. Based on the facts here, the conduct is likely lawful under federal campaign-finance rules for independent expenditures, but it still collides with anti–quid-pro-quo governance norms when spending is tied to legislative posture and permitting conflicts. The legal line would tighten only if there is coordination with candidates or officeholders, which can trigger federal prohibitions and enforcement risk under campaign-finance rules; the institutional harm is that even without coordination, policy becomes an auction in states where Meta has direct commercial stakes.

Media

Detail

<p>Meta is preparing to spend $65 million in 2026 to support state politicians it considers friendly to the artificial intelligence industry, beginning this week in Texas and Illinois, company representatives said.</p><p>Meta is starting two new super PACs, according to federal filings: Forge the Future Project, which is backing Republicans, and Making Our Tomorrow, which is backing Democrats. These groups join two other Meta-started super PACs, including one focused on California and another that finances spending in other states.</p><p>Federal and state filings show the four super PACs have an initial combined budget of $65 million. Company representatives said Meta generally plans to support incumbents from both parties or participate in open races rather than target sitting officials for removal.</p><p>In Texas, where Meta has three A.I. data center projects, Forge the Future Project is preparing to back Republican legislators, officials, and candidates it views as supportive. State and local officials have clashed over data center construction; State Senator Paul Bettencourt threatened legal action against Hood County after county commissioners considered a moratorium on new data centers.</p>