Debate Dossier
AI Policy · Live Motion
Should the Government Control AI?
The governance question one level above "regulate or not." Who holds the steering wheel.
FormatBP / Worlds / Policy
DifficultyMedium
Main clashPublic accountability vs state capture
Best forInstitutional design, Public goods, Capture risk
The round turns on this
Is the state the right actor to govern AI?
Control
- Public goods need public stewardship
- Democratic accountability beats VC accountability
- Strategic capability cannot be private
Do not control
- States lack the technical depth
- Politicized AI is its own risk
- Private competition surfaces failures faster
Whoever owns "alternative" wins.
Argument arena · prep both sides
Pro
AI is becoming infrastructure. Infrastructure under private control without democratic oversight is a failure mode.
PRO 1 Public goods
ClaimCritical infrastructure is publicly stewarded for reasons that apply to AI.
WarrantWhen a system mediates every other system, it cannot be governed by quarterly earnings.
ImpactDemocratic accountability is a floor, not a constraint.
Attack this
Con will say "infrastructure" framing is question-begging.
PRO 2 Strategic capability
ClaimAI is already an arm of national security and economic policy.
WarrantTreating it as a private market in this domain is unstable.
ImpactThe state will end up controlling it after a crisis; doing it earlier is cheaper.
Attack this
Con will say state control of strategic tech (e.g., semiconductors) has had mixed results.
VS
Con
Government control of AI substitutes one set of failure modes for a worse set.
CON 1 Technical depth
ClaimStates consistently lag the field they regulate by years.
WarrantHiring, agility, and bureaucratic structure are all wrong for fast-moving capability work.
ImpactYou replace fast private failures with slow, locked-in public ones.
Attack this
Pro will say regulation does not require the regulator to be a frontier lab.
CON 2 Political capture
ClaimA politicized AI sector becomes a tool of whichever party holds it.
WarrantThe same instruments that protect users get repurposed against rivals.
ImpactThe risk you fear from private actors is worse with state control.
Attack this
Pro will say constitutional limits and judicial review handle this.
Sample round · flowed with judge notes
Pro · openingStrong open
AI is becoming infrastructure. Critical infrastructure under purely private control without democratic accountability is a known failure mode.
JudgeFrames the motion as accountability.
Con · responseBest turn
States lag the field they regulate by years. You trade fast private failures for slow public ones, and the politicized AI sector becomes a partisan instrument.
JudgeTwo-pronged attack.
Pro · rebuttalRecovers
Regulation does not require the regulator to be a frontier lab. Audit, disclosure, and compute oversight can sit at the state without the state needing to ship the model.
JudgeDisaggregates governance from operations.
Con · weighingBurden
You just redefined "control" as "regulate." The motion says control. Take Pro's actual mechanism and the round becomes a much narrower regulatory debate.
JudgeBurden frame.
Judge ballot
Con wins
Narrow margin
Reason for decision
Pro's structural case is strong but their mechanism collapses control into regulation under cross. Con holds the burden line.
Key clash
Does "control" mean ownership or oversight.
Pro · feedback
Pick one mechanism and defend it. Oversight and operation are different motions.
Con · feedback
Strong burden play. The technical-depth point was less load-bearing than you treated it.
One drill before the rematch
Argue Pro on a narrower motion: the government should run a public compute utility for civic AI.