Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jun 1
Bores Opposed 5 Key New York AI Guardrail Bills as NY-12 Race Sharpens
Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jun 1

Bores Opposed 5 Key New York AI Guardrail Bills as NY-12 Race Sharpens

3 articles · Updated · POLITICO · Jun 1
  • Five New York AI guardrail bills drew opposition from Assemblymember Alex Bores, including measures on hiring tools, lending, health data and state-agency automated decision-making, undercutting his image as the district’s leading AI legislator.
  • Bores said his no votes reflected bill design rather than opposition to regulation, citing broad definitions, unpriced compliance costs for small businesses and one labor proposal that could block AI-driven job displacement until a study due by 2034.
  • His record was mixed on some measures: he backed the LOADinG Act in committee before voting no on the floor, later supported a related disclosure bill, and eventually voted for a reworked health-data measure that Hochul vetoed.
  • The votes are becoming campaign ammunition in the NY-12 contest, with rival Sam Schlossberg attacking Bores over AI-industry backing and Micah Lasher also promoting his own tech-regulation credentials.
As the White House seeks a national AI policy, are state-level consumer protection efforts destined to be preempted?
Can new AI auditing technologies effectively combat hiring bias, challenging claims that such regulations are merely costly burdens?