Wednesday, July 15, 2026

The Plan to Confiscate AI Company Stock

By Daniel J. Pilla

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

 

For years, socialist advocates of Big Government have pushed wealth taxes as the next step in redistributing the fruits of one’s labor and enterprise. Their premise is that government has a superior claim to the wealth accumulated by successful individuals and businesses, even after the payment of taxes incurred in the creation and consumption of that wealth. Whether the target is high-income earners, inherited wealth, or unrealized capital gains, those advocates’ objective has been to transfer private assets (beyond mere “income”) into the hands of the state.

 

Leftist U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders’ proposed American AI Sovereign Wealth Fund Act (introduced in the Senate on June 19 but yet unnumbered) crosses a line that previous redistributionist lawmakers didn’t reach. Sanders’ scheme goes beyond simply taxing wealth. It compels business owners to surrender ownership of the company itself that creates their wealth.

 

The distinction matters.

 

I’ve written before about proposals such as Minnesota’s wealth tax proposal, which would punish the accumulation of capital by taxing assets that were built through years of investment, creativity, innovation, and risk-taking. Those proposals are economically destructive, but at least they leave ownership of the income-producing assets in private hands.

 

Sanders’ proposal is fundamentally different. Instead of merely taxing successful businesses, it would require qualifying artificial intelligence (AI) companies to transfer half of their ownership interests directly to the federal government, to be controlled in a so-called “sovereign wealth fund.” The federal government would become a major owner of private companies, but not because it invested capital, developed technology, assumed entrepreneurial risk, or purchased stock in the marketplace. They would become owners because Congress ordered the transfer.

 

While the mechanism is labeled as an “excise tax,” the tax must be paid by transferring company equity in such an amount that “immediately after the tax has been paid, the [federal government] shall hold 50 percent of all outstanding equity interests” in the company. That’s not taxation. That’s outright theft by government of private assets carried out under the socialist concept of compulsory state ownership.

 

Sanders’ motivation is driven by the same philosophy that drives all modern socialists: free markets are unfair in that they end up vesting substantial wealth in the hands of just a few. Sanders’ remarks in the proposed act justifying the theft of private assets include: “The 8 richest Americans — all AI oligarchs — together have more than $2.9 trillion in wealth, more than bottom 59 percent of U.S. households combined.” Beyond that, the “findings” of fact presented in the introduction to the bill itself declare that artificial intelligence “is a public resource” chiefly because “a small number of oligarchs have essentially stolen the creative work of hundreds of millions of people” in order to create it.

 

To Sanders’ way of thinking, the alleged theft of intellectual property by AI developers justifies government theft of half the stock of AI companies. The bill asserts that the wealth generated by AI “must benefit humanity.”

 

Sanders portrays his proposal as allowing every American to “share in the wealth” of the AI revolution. He ignores the fact that every American already has the right to “share in” such wealth. All one has to do is buy stock in any AI company that is publicly traded. But the truth is this proposal is not about providing opportunity to the common citizen. It’s about the Marxist idea of transferring ownership of private property into the hands of the state, by force when necessary.

 

Under the legislation, a government-controlled “sovereign wealth fund” would receive the value of the transferred ownership interests, and all Americans would purportedly receive annual dividend payments, estimated at roughly $1,000 per person. Sanders claims that eventually, “the wealth that it generates could be used to ensure that every man, woman and child in the United States has a decent and dignified standard of living, including the right to health care, education, housing, and a healthy and habitable environment.”

 

But the proposal is that just 5 percent of the wealth of the fund would be used for direct payments to Americans. What would the balance of the 95 percent be used for? The answer is government-sponsored welfare programs, including “access to health care, education, and housing.” In other words, programs that create even more dependence on government.

 

Who doesn’t want free money from the government? But that promise ignores the most fundamental principle of free markets: Those who receive the rewards should also bear the risks. Investors purchase stock with their own money. Entrepreneurs mortgage their homes, invest their savings, sometimes go without paychecks, and spend years building businesses that often fail. They devote their careers to creating products that consumers voluntarily purchase. Every dollar earned represents risk assumed by someone. The recipients of these proposed government dividends have assumed none of that risk. They invested nothing. They sacrificed nothing. They stand to lose nothing if the enterprise performs poorly. Sanders affirms this very fact, claiming that “If the value of these companies goes down, as others have suggested, the companies would bear the losses, not the federal government.”

 

And there’s the rub. The federal government stands in the unique position of an uninvested “partner.” It would acquire ownership without purchasing it. Unlike every legitimate shareholder in the marketplace, Washington would obtain its interest by legislative fiat entirely without risk.

 

There is a world of difference between earning ownership and confiscating it.

 

Moreover, once the federal government has control of the income generated by its 50 percent ownership interest, there’s simply no restriction on what it can do with it. As we know from the long experiment with the Social Security benefits program, future Congresses can change the law any way they wish with just 51 percent of the support of sitting legislators and a willing president. As years pass, future citizens might get a dividend payment, but they might not.

 

Perhaps the most troubling aspect of the proposal is its governance structure. The legislation contemplates an “Independent Commission for Democratic AI” to manage the public’s interest. The commission would consist of seven unelected members (nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate) selected from a list of candidates provided by Congress. The commission would exercise voting authority over government-owned shares and participate directly in corporate governance.

 

The irony is rich. Sanders is concerned that currently, just eight individuals in the private sector control substantial amounts of American wealth. Instead, he would substitute that for seven unelected bureaucrats and political hacks exercising forced control over the operations of private businesses. That concept should alarm anyone who values free enterprise.

 

Businesses exist to develop products, satisfy customers’ needs, innovate, and earn returns for those who invest their resources. Government exists to establish reasonable rules to prevent one person or business from unlawfully converting the income or assets of another through force or by fraud. Those are entirely different functions. Once political appointees begin participating in the management of private enterprises, business decisions inevitably become political decisions. And you can be sure that depending upon who happens to control Congress and the While House, about one half of the population will vehemently disagree with those decisions.

 

History demonstrates that governments are remarkably poor at efficiently allocating capital. Bureaucrats respond to political pressure, election cycles, interest groups, and ideological agendas. Entrepreneurs respond to the wants and needs of consumers. Their free purchasing decisions (or not) in the marketplace control the success or failure of a particular business. Government should never be involved in such decisions.

 

The commission would not be bound by factors that ensure the best interests of the company’s investors or customers. Rather, the commission would be “mandated to promote the goals of worker welfare, public safety, fair competition, environmental sustainability, and financial solvency.” These politically motivated concepts are entirely undefined. Moreover, the money in the fund could never be used to provide “financial assistance to, or for the benefit of” any AI company from whom the wealth is confiscated. Thus, the proposal is, in every sense of the word, a one-way street.

 

Even more concerning is the unique nature of the companies targeted by this legislation. AI is rapidly becoming one of the principal means through which Americans obtain information, conduct research, communicate, and create and operate businesses. Government ownership of substantial voting interests in these companies raises obvious concerns.

 

To be clear, the legislation does not expressly authorize government officials to determine what information Americans may access via the AI platforms it would partly own. But it is not unreasonable to ask where that path may lead. If political appointees possess and exercise meaningful influence over the governance of companies that increasingly shape information, communications, and technological development, today’s corporate governance authority could become tomorrow’s influence over product design, content policies, or access to emerging technologies. It is not a wild leap to suggest that government’s direct control of boardrooms could turn into direct control over the nature of the information Americans are allowed to use and consume. Remember the Disinformation Governance Board, created in 2022 within the Department of Homeland Security during the Biden administration? Here we go again!

 

This is precisely the potential worst-case scenario that Americans should examine before granting government unprecedented ownership authority over the nation’s most innovative private enterprises.

 

This proposal also creates a dangerous precedent that could extend far beyond artificial intelligence. If Congress can require AI companies to surrender half their ownership because the industry has become so “systemically important,” what prevents the next Congress and president from applying the same reasoning to pharmaceutical companies, energy producers, home builders, financial institutions, insurance providers, food producers, biotech firms, or car manufacturers? Aren’t all of these sectors systemically important? Once compulsory government ownership of private enterprise is accepted as legitimate, the list of future targets becomes a matter of political preference rather than constitutional principle.

 

This is an open, brazen Marxist attack on private property itself. Private ownership is not merely an economic arrangement. It is one of the principal safeguards of individual liberty. When citizens own property independent of government, they possess a measure of independence from government itself. As government ownership of the means of production expands, private independence necessarily contracts. The end result is total dependence on government for one’s daily needs. There is no leverage in changing another’s opinion or compelling his support greater than that of being the provider of the daily sustenance that person needs to live.

 

That is why proposals like Minnesota’s wealth tax are so troubling. They gradually erode the connection between effort and reward. Sanders’ proposal goes even further by weakening the connection between ownership and investment. America did not become the world’s leader in innovation because unelected bureaucrats directed the activities of private enterprise. It became the world’s leader because entrepreneurs risked their own fortunes, investors voluntarily supplied capital, and consumers — not bureaucrats — determined which ideas succeeded.

 

The American AI Sovereign Wealth Fund Act turns that formula upside down.

 

It allows politicians to acquire substantial ownership of successful companies without risking taxpayer capital in the marketplace. It allows millions of Americans to receive investment returns from businesses in which they invested nothing, and for whose failures they bear no financial responsibility. It places government appointees in positions of influence over some of the most strategically important technology companies in the world with no accountability to the marketplace.

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