Anthropic is planning a major Washington D.C. expansion, doubling its employee count and opening an official office by 2026 to prepare lawmakers for AI’s accelerating impact on American industries. The company’s head of policy Jack Clark warns that current AI developments are “small potatoes compared to where it’ll be in a year,” positioning this as a critical moment for policymaker education ahead of the 2026 midterms and 2028 presidential election.
Why it matters: Anthropic believes AI is moving too fast for policymakers to keep up, with Clark describing the challenge of communicating exponential technological change as “almost without precedent.”
Driving the news: The company is launching a week of D.C. events starting Monday, with Clark and CEO Dario Amodei meeting House and Senate leadership and committee heads.
What they’re saying: Clark emphasizes the dramatic scale of change ahead for lawmakers and their constituents.
What we’re watching: Clark said Anthropic wants to see Congress pass federal transparency requirements for AI companies mandating the public disclosure of safety and risk assessment practices.
Zoom in: The company plans to tell policymakers that “AI products are going to be deployed at a far larger scale than you see today, and they are going to be affecting your constituents lives in many more ways than today.”