OpenAI employees donate $215K to rival super PAC opposing Brockman’s pro-AI lobbying group OpenAI employees donated over $215,000 to a super PAC opposing Leading the Future, a pro-AI deregulation group backed by OpenAI president Greg Brockman and his wife with $25 million. The donations reflect internal tensions at the AI company as staff push back against lighter AI regulation ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. OpenAI employees donate $215K to rival super PAC opposing Brockman’s pro-AI lobbying group Internal tensions at the AI giant spill into political spending as staffers push back against their president's $25 million bet on lighter regulation More than $215,000 from OpenAI employees has flowed into a political effort directly opposing Leading the Future, the super PAC backed by their own company president, Greg Brockman. The money trail Leading the Future, or LTF, was established in 2025 with a clear mission: support political candidates who favor a lighter regulatory touch on artificial intelligence ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Brockman and his wife Anna personally contributed $25 million to the effort. The couple also each donated $12.5 million to Trump’s MAGA Inc. super PAC in 2025. LTF has raised between $125 million and $140 million in total, with significant backing from Andreessen Horowitz, the venture capital firm better known as a16z. Employees began raising concerns about OpenAI’s perceived ties to LTF during internal meetings in May 2026. On June 1, 2026, OpenAI released a statement distancing itself from any super PAC activity. The company said it does not engage in or fund employee-directed PACs and emphasized that Brockman’s contributions were made in his personal capacity. A crowded battlefield LTF isn’t operating in a vacuum. Rival super PACs have emerged across the AI industry, including groups aligned with Anthropic, OpenAI’s most prominent competitor. Why crypto investors should care Brockman has been linked to broader discussions around token economics and crypto-adjacent ventures. Lawmakers who are friendly to AI deregulation tend to be the same ones who favor a lighter touch on digital assets. The a16z connection makes this explicit, given the firm’s massive crypto portfolio alongside its AI bets. The $215,000 in employee donations is small relative to the hundreds of millions flowing through AI super PACs. When the people building the most advanced AI systems in the world are politically organizing against their own president’s vision for regulation, it complicates the narrative that the industry speaks with one voice on policy. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .