TLDR: An AI expert suggests that by 2032, artificial intelligence could become deeply integrated into governance systems, potentially serving as an impartial, consistent, and evidence-driven decision-maker, even in a presidential capacity. This vision emphasizes AI’s ability to cut through political gridlock and disinformation, not as a robot in office, but as a core component of a more effective government.
Eli Lopian, founder of Typemock and author of “AICracy: Beyond Democracy,” posits a provocative future where artificial intelligence could play a pivotal role in governance, potentially even influencing the U.S. presidency by 2032. Lopian, an AI expert with decades of experience building software systems for high-stakes environments, suggests this isn’t about electing a robot, but rather leveraging AI as an impartial, consistent, and evidence-driven decision-maker within the systems that shape our lives.
The expert’s perspective stems from observing a concerning pattern around 2019: a collapse in public trust in governments, with democracies paralyzed by short-term incentives, disinformation, and political gridlock. Decisions, he notes, have become increasingly detached from facts, drowning in emotion and noise. Lopian began to question if AI could offer a superior method of governance.
By 2032, Lopian believes AI tools will be deeply embedded in critical sectors such as healthcare, education, justice systems, and governance. While acknowledging AI’s imperfections, he highlights its strengths: AI lacks desires, does not seek power, fears no electoral loss, and does not lie to protect an ego. These limitations, paradoxically, become strengths, allowing AI to bring clarity, consistency, and impartiality to decision-making, unburdened by human biases, emotions, or lobbying pressures.
Lopian emphasizes several principles for integrating AI ethically and effectively:
Human Guidance: AI’s effectiveness is contingent on human guidance, embedding values, ethics, and context into the system.
Amplification, Not Competition: AI should be viewed as an amplifier of human intuition, scaling clarity and reducing noise in overwhelmed systems, rather than a competitor.
Systemic Fairness: AI can analyze patterns of inequality and assist in interventions to promote fairness.
Moral Support: While AI cannot make moral decisions, it can support the creation of more moral systems.
Also Read:
- Governments Worldwide Accelerate AI Integration in Public Services
- Navigating AI’s Ethical Frontier: Key Developments and Governance in 2025
This vision suggests a future where the question might shift from “can AI govern?” to “why would we govern without it?” The core idea is that AI can help governments, companies, and communities reason across massive complexity in real-time, becoming a collaborator in solving society’s most challenging problems.


