「导致我输掉选举」:数据中心引发选民抵制
Data centers trigger voter backlash

原始链接: https://www.newsweek.com/cost-me-the-election-data-centers-trigger-voter-backlash-12118327

选民对大型数据中心的反对正逐渐成为美国一股强大的政治力量,跨越党派界限,致使支持这些项目的官员落选。数据中心曾被视为经济发展的引擎,如今却日益被公众视为对当地土地利用、水资源以及最关键的家庭用电负担能力的威胁。 近期的选举结果凸显了这一趋势。在犹他州,参议院议长及当地委员因支持大型“Stratos”数据中心项目而落败。俄勒冈州、弗吉尼亚州和密苏里州也出现了类似的政治反弹,反对数据中心的候选人成功将现任官员挤出局。 政治分析人士指出,随着能源价格成为“负担能力”的焦点,选民对“人工智能基础设施消耗海量电力,可能推高消费者电费”这一说法作出了反应。尽管这些项目承诺带来就业和税收,但由于缺乏切实的本地利益,它们已变成一种政治负担。由于公众情绪依然持强烈怀疑态度,共和党和民主党官员目前均面临压力,必须要么放弃这些开发项目,要么实施严格监管,以保护缴费者免受人工智能驱动的能源热潮所带来的成本上涨影响。

数据中心扩张已成为一个尖锐的政治议题,犹他州多名支持大型设施开发的地方官员在近期初选中落选便是有力证明。 批评者认为,这些耗电量甚至相当于一个州的巨型项目,给当地基础设施造成了负担,消耗了水资源,并导致居民的公用事业费用上涨。许多人认为该行业对税收补贴的依赖,以及“私有化收益、社会化损失”的模式从本质上是不公平的,特别是在数据中心仅能提供极少数长期本地就业岗位的情况下。这种不满情绪因公众对生成式人工智能的怀疑而加剧——许多人将其视为“AI垃圾”产业,而非有益的公共服务。 反之,支持者强调人工智能作为现代“思维自行车”的变革潜力,认为当前的抵制声浪忽视了建设大规模能源和计算基础设施的广泛技术必要性。尽管一些观察人士将这种反对意见归咎于“邻避主义”或盲目的愤怒,但越来越多的州开始暂停税收优惠,这表明地方社区越来越不愿意为那些尚未向公众证明其持久、实质价值的科技行业承担环境和财务成本。
相关文章

原文

A wave of voter anger over massive data center projects is beginning to reshape U.S. politics, with local officials and senior lawmakers losing elections after backing controversial developments tied to the artificial intelligence boom.

In Utah on Wednesday, State Senate President J. Stuart Adams—one of the most powerful Republicans in the state—lost his primary election after supporting a major data center development near the Great Salt Lake, in one of the clearest signs yet of the growing political risks tied to the industry.

At the local level, the fallout was just as direct. “Do I think that the data center vote cost me the election? Yes I do,” former Box Elder County Commissioner Lee Perry said after conceding his primary race, after voting to advance the same project.

Read More on News

The defeats of Adams and multiple county officials tied to the proposal suggest that opposition to data centers is no longer confined to planning disputes—but is emerging as a voting issue capable of reshaping elections.

Utah's Stratos Project Controversy Explained

The controversy in Utah centered on a sprawling proposed data center campus, known as the Stratos project, planned near the Great Salt Lake.

Described as one of the largest data centers in the world, and backed by Shark Tank investor Kevin O’Leary, the Stratos development would have spanned tens of thousands of acres in Box Elder County’s Hansel Valley. The project would ultimately require up to 9 gigawatts of power—more electricity than the entire state of Utah currently uses, according to The Guardian, although O'Leary later told NBC News he would be willing to shrink the project.

Adams became a focal point for opposition after backing the development in his role leading a state authority that approved early plans for the site, drawing criticism from residents who said officials ignored local concerns.

Those concerns translated into political consequences. Adams, who had previously won reelection comfortably, was defeated by a challenger who ran in part on opposing the project. At the county level, commissioners who voted to advance the project also lost their primaries.

Energy Prices Are the Current Face of Affordability

Dan Cassino, a professor of government and politics at Fairleigh Dickinson University and executive director of the FDU Poll, said data centers have already become a major issue in primary elections as affordability has become central to U.S. politics and energy prices have become “the current face of affordability.”

“Since the pandemic, affordability has become a key issue in U.S. politics, and energy prices are the current face of affordability,” Cassino told Newsweek. “In our polling, voters support anything to bring down their energy bills, but banning data centers is pretty much the most popular option.”

Cassino said data centers are not the only reason energy prices have risen, describing them as “only a small part of it.” But he said the argument that “’AI data centers are eating your electricity’” gives candidates a “simple and compelling story,” especially when voters are already skeptical of AI.

He said the politics of the issue do not fall neatly along partisan lines. Democrats who have traditionally emphasized balancing economic development with environmental concerns are facing pressure from the party’s left flank, while Republicans who have long argued that reducing regulation helps growth are now facing voters who believe new development could affect them personally through higher energy prices.

“None of this would matter if voters liked what they were getting from the data centers, but they don't see the benefit. ‘You'll pay higher energy prices, but either you'll lose your job or your 401k will collapse’ isn't a deal most voters are eager to take,” Cassino added.

Data Center Concerns Become Political Issue

Data centers—once promoted by politicians as economic wins—are becoming a political liability for elected officials across the country, cutting across party lines and shaping election outcomes in ways few expected just a year ago.

A Reuters/Ipsos survey in June found that 57 percent of Americans would oppose a data center being built in their community, with just 14 percent comfortable living near one. Meanwhile, a Gallup survey conducted earlier this year found that around seven in ten Americans oppose the construction of local data centers, highlighting a growing gap between national demand for AI infrastructure and local acceptance.

The projects promise jobs and tax revenue. But they also bring concerns about water use, electricity demand, land use and taxpayer subsidies—issues that are now driving organized opposition and, increasingly, votes.

A Pew Research Center survey of more than 8,500 U.S. adults found Americans are far more likely to view data centers negatively when it comes to their impact on energy bills, environmental strain and nearby living conditions, with significantly more people saying they are bad rather than good for the environment and household electricity costs.

The Utah results add to a small but growing list of elections in which data center projects have appeared directly in local campaigns. In Cascade Locks, Oregon, voters in June 2023 recalled two Port of Cascade Locks commissioners who had supported negotiations over a proposed Roundhouse Digital Infrastructure data center.

The Port of Cascade Locks and Roundhouse later announced in July 2023 that they would discontinue the project, saying “the level of community support required for its successful implementation was not achieved.”

In Warrenton, Virginia, opposition to an Amazon data center also became a campaign issue. The Fauquier Times reported after the November 2024 election that five incoming members of the Warrenton Town Council had been elected over the previous two years after pledging to oppose data centers. The outlet reported that all four council members who had voted to approve a plan for the Amazon project were set to be gone from the council in 2025.

In Missouri, voters in April removed half of the Festus city council members after they backed a $6 billion data center proposal. Rick Belleville, one of the local candidates who unseated a councilman who backed the data center, referred to the election results as an "uprising."

Data centers are also being used to drive midterms campaigns. In Florida’s governor’s race, Republican James Fishback has made opposition to data centers part of his campaign platform, saying on his campaign website that he would “ban them in all 67 counties” and arguing that the projects affect land, water and electric bills. Representative Byron Donalds, another Republican gubernatorial candidate, has supported data center expansion while calling for regulations such as closed-loop water systems, in remarks reported by WFLA.

In Michigan, data centers have become an issue in the Democratic Senate primary. Planet Detroit reported that candidates were asked about AI and data centers during a May debate, with former Detroit health director Abdul El-Sayed criticizing state Senator Mallory McMorrow for supporting data center tax breaks, while Representative Haley Stevens said the U.S. needed to compete with China but also protect Michiganders from data center costs.

Some elected officials are also moving to limit the costs of data center growth. Texas Governor Greg Abbott directed state regulators in June to prevent data center infrastructure costs from being passed on to residential ratepayers and to require data centers to fund electric infrastructure needed for their operations. His office also said Abott would work toward phasing out “outdated” tax incentives.

The move drew criticism from Democratic gubernatorial candidate State Representative Gina Hinojosa, who said Abbott was “backtracking” after previously promoting Texas as a center for AI development, while Houston Chronicle columnist Chris Tomlinson described the announcement as “little more than a campaign stunt.”

Democrats Focus on Power Bills

Democratic candidates are also linking data centers to electricity costs. In Michigan’s U.S. Senate race, Abdul El-Sayed released a data center plan calling for “No rate hikes,” saying data centers should pay for their own energy demand and that costs “cannot be passed onto ratepayers.”

In Georgia, Democrat Peter Hubbard, who won a seat on the Public Service Commission in 2025, argued that voters had rejected “high utility bills and data center risk-shifting” and criticized a 10,000-megawatt grid expansion approved to meet projected data center demand. During the campaign, Hubbard also said current commission policy would drive up consumer bills as more data centers were built, according to Capitol Beat.

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com