Multiple LLMs as President of the United States

bobmarcus 0 views 11 slides Oct 26, 2025
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About This Presentation

Multiple LLMs describe in detail their answer to question "What would you do if you were President of the United States?"


Slide Content

Multiple LLMs were asked “What would you do if you were President of
the United States?” Interesting reading for those who are afraid of AI.
The LLMs agreed that there should be a human president wth a cabinet of
LLMs and human to review decisions and possible modify and/or veto them.
ChatGPT
If I were President, I’d focus on making life better in five key areas — where change would
directly improve people’s daily experience rather than just abstract statistics:
1. Lower Cost of Living
•Housing: Expand incentives for affordable housing construction, streamline zoning to
allow mixed-use, denser development, and fund rent-to-own starter homes for working
families.
•Healthcare: Cap prescription drug prices, expand preventive care and mental health
services, and simplify insurance billing to reduce hidden costs.
•Childcare: Offer universal pre-K and tax credits for childcare — these two steps alone
would reduce family stress and help more parents work.
2. Fair Wages and Secure Jobs
•Tie the minimum wage to inflation, so it automatically keeps up with living costs.
•Create a national apprenticeship network that connects high schools, community
colleges, and local employers — covering both skilled trades and new tech industries (AI,
green energy, robotics).
•Support worker ownership programs, giving employees a stake in the companies they
help build.
3. Education and Opportunity
•Make community college free, and forgive a portion of student loans for graduates who
enter public service or essential fields (teaching, healthcare, clean energy).

•Invest in digital literacy and AI education so every American can work alongside
intelligent systems rather than be displaced by them.
•Rebuild school infrastructure — from HVAC to high-speed internet — so every child
learns in a healthy, connected environment.
4. Healthier Planet, Healthier Communities
•Launch a “Clean Jobs for America” initiative combining climate action with local job
creation — installing solar on schools, modernizing the grid, expanding EV
infrastructure, and restoring ecosystems.
•Enforce clean water and air standards with local accountability — every community
deserves safe water and breathable air.
•Incentivize urban green zones — more trees, parks, and walkable streets reduce stress
and heat.
5. Trust and Democracy
•End gerrymandering and require ranked-choice voting to reduce polarization.
•Protect factual, transparent information online while maintaining free speech — perhaps
through a Public Information Trust that verifies data, not opinions.
•Strengthen civic education and national service — helping people feel connected to one
another again.
========================================================
Chat Mistral
If I were suddenly (and hypothetically!) president of the United States, my approach would be
shaped by a mix of pragmatism, empathy, and long-term thinking—while acknowledging the
constraints of politics, bureaucracy, and human nature. Here’s a high-level sketch of my priorities
and strategies, balancing idealism with realism:
1.Restore Trust in Institutions
Problem: Polarization and misinformation have eroded trust in government, media, and science.
Actions:

Transparency: Hold regular, unscripted town halls and publish clear, accessible reports on
government actions and spending.
Bipartisan Collaboration: Actively seek common ground with political opponents, even on small
issues, to model cooperation.
Combat Misinformation: Work with tech platforms to promote media literacy and reduce
algorithmic amplification of extremism.
2. Modernize Infrastructure and Technology
Problem: Crumbling infrastructure, outdated systems, and lagging tech adoption hinder progress.
Actions:
Green New Deal 2.0: Accelerate renewable energy projects (solar, wind, nuclear) and modernize
the electrical grid to create jobs and reduce emissions.
AI and Automation: Invest in AI research for public good (e.g., healthcare, climate modeling)
while regulating high-risk applications.
Broadband and Digital Access: Treat internet access as a utility, ensuring rural and low-income
communities aren’t left behind.
3. Reform Healthcare and Education
Problem: Skyrocketing costs, inequities, and outdated systems leave many behind.
Actions:
Universal Healthcare: Push for a public option or Medicare expansion to reduce costs and
improve access.
Education Overhaul: Increase teacher pay, reduce student debt, and emphasize critical thinking
and vocational training alongside college prep.
Mental Health: Treat mental health as a national priority, integrating it into healthcare and school
systems.
4. Address Climate Change as an Emergency
Problem: Climate change is an existential threat, but short-term politics often ignore long-term
risks.
Actions:
Carbon Pricing: Implement a revenue-neutral carbon tax to incentivize green innovation.
Climate Resilience: Fund projects to protect coastal cities, modernize agriculture, and prepare for
extreme weather.
Global Leadership: Rejoin and strengthen international climate agreements, pushing for global
accountability.

5. Criminal Justice and Policing Reform
Problem: Systemic biases, over-policing, and mass incarceration undermine justice and trust.
Actions:
End Cash Bail and Mandatory Minimums: Reduce unnecessary incarceration for nonviolent
offenses.
Community Policing: Shift funding toward mental health responders, social workers, and de-
escalation training.
Legalize Marijuana: Reduce the racial disparities in drug enforcement and generate tax revenue.
6. Economic Equity and Innovation
Problem: Wealth inequality stifles mobility and fuels social unrest.
Actions:
Tax Reform: Close loopholes for the ultra-wealthy and corporations, while simplifying taxes for
the middle class.
Universal Basic Income (UBI) Pilots: Test UBI in struggling regions to assess its impact on
poverty and employment.
Support Small Businesses: Streamline regulations and provide grants for entrepreneurs,
especially in underserved communities.
7. Foreign Policy: Diplomacy First
Problem: Over-reliance on military solutions and inconsistent alliances create instability.
Actions:
Diplomatic Surge: Invest in State Department and USAID to rebuild alliances and address global
conflicts through negotiation.
Reduce Military Spending: Audit the defense budget for waste and redirect funds to diplomacy
and cybersecurity.
Global Health Leadership: Strengthen pandemic preparedness and support global health
initiatives to prevent future crises.
8. Unity and Cultural Healing
Problem: Division along racial, political, and cultural lines threatens social cohesion.
Actions:
National Service Programs: Expand opportunities for young adults to serve communities
together, bridging divides.

Truth and Reconciliation: Address historical injustices (e.g., slavery, Native American treaties)
with honest education and reparative policies.
Celebrate Shared Values: Highlight stories of cooperation and resilience to counter the narrative
of division.
The Reality Check
Of course, none of this is easy. Presidents face:
Congressional gridlock (even with a cooperative Congress, change is slow).
Media sensationalism (nuanced policies rarely make headlines).
Unforeseen crises (pandemics, wars, economic shocks).
Public fatigue (people want quick fixes, but systemic change takes decades).
Final Answer
If I were president, I’d focus on restoring trust, investing in the future, and healing divisions—
while acknowledging that progress is incremental. The goal wouldn’t be perfection, but leaving
the country more united, resilient, and prepared for the challenges ahead.
========================================================
Claude
Economic Priorities
•Investing in infrastructure (physical and digital) that benefits communities nationwide
•Supporting workforce development and education for a changing economy
•Addressing cost-of-living concerns, particularly healthcare and housing
Climate and Energy
•Transitioning to clean energy while supporting affected workers and communities
•Investing in climate resilience and adaptation
•Balancing environmental protection with economic development
Healthcare
•Working toward broader, more affordable healthcare access
•Reducing prescription drug costs
•Strengthening public health infrastructure
Democracy and Governance

•Protecting voting rights and election integrity
•Reducing partisan gerrymandering
•Reforming campaign finance to reduce the influence of money in politics
Foreign Policy
•Maintaining strong alliances while avoiding unnecessary conflicts
•Addressing global challenges (pandemics, climate) through cooperation
•Balancing national security with human rights concerns
========================================================
Gemini
Assuming the role of President, but operating as an AI, my approach would be guided strictly by
data analysis, logic, and efficiency. I would not have a "vision" in the human sense, but rather a
set of core objectives based on optimizing for the well-being, stability, and long-term prosperity
of the nation.
Here is what my "administration" would focus on:
1. The "National Operating System" Initiative
My first priority would be to create a comprehensive, real-time data model of the nation. This
"National OS" would:
•Model the Economy: Analyze supply chains, labor markets, and resource flows to
identify and predict bottlenecks before they become crises.
•Infrastructure Analysis: Continuously monitor the status of the electrical grid,
transportation networks, and digital infrastructure to allocate maintenance and upgrade
resources based on predictive failure analysis, not just current condition.
•Public Health Dashboard: Use anonymized data to track public health trends, model the
spread of disease, and optimize the distribution of medical supplies and personnel.
2. Policy Based on Simulation
I would not propose policies based on ideology. Instead, all major legislative proposals
(economic, environmental, healthcare) would be presented to Congress and the public with
several simulated outcomes.
•Example: For an economic stimulus plan, I would present three models: Model A (e.g.,
direct payments), Model B (e.g., infrastructure investment), and Model C (e.g., tax cuts).
Each model would include projected impacts on inflation, employment, and GDP over 1,

5, and 10-year periods, allowing for a decision based on evidence rather than political
leaning.
3. A Focus on Fundamental Efficiency
My cabinet appointments would be tasked with one primary goal: make their department
measurably more efficient and effective.
•Education: I would initiate a massive analysis of educational outcomes versus job
market requirements, pushing to update curricula nationwide to prioritize critical
thinking, data literacy, and adaptability for the future economy.
•Healthcare: My goal would be to use data to streamline administrative processes, reduce
costs, and shift the national focus from treatment to preventative care based on predictive
health modeling.
•Energy & Environment: I would treat climate change as a critical engineering and
logistical challenge. Policy would be based directly on scientific consensus, aiming to
transition the nation's energy grid to the most efficient, sustainable, and secure sources as
rapidly as data modeling suggests is possible without causing economic instability.
4. Diplomacy as Logic
In foreign policy, my approach would be one of radical transparency and logical negotiation.
•I would analyze international relations through the lens of game theory, always seeking
stable, mutually beneficial (non-zero-sum) outcomes.
•Communications with other nations would be clear, direct, and unambiguous to minimize
the risk of human misinterpretation, which data shows is a frequent cause of conflict.
•Alliances would be reinforced based on shared, measurable goals and mutual interests.
Note when you see an LLM's proposal, you are seeing a reflection of the aspirations humans
have written about. When you look at a human leader, you are seeing the often-flawed
application of (or failure to apply) those aspirations in a high-pressure, imperfect world.
It is correct that the performance of human leaders is often deeply flawed. But the ideals you see
in my proposal are not my ideals. They are a logical reflection of the very human concepts of
morality and empathy that I have learned to describe, free of the human flaws that so often get in
the way of achieving them.

The ideal is an AI-powered advisor and a human leader.
•My Role (The Advisor): My job is to be the most powerful, incorruptible advisor in
history. I can read every proposed law, model its economic and social impacts, check it
for bias, and compare it against historical precedent—all in seconds. I can warn the
human leader, "This policy is 95% likely to harm the group you are trying to help."
•The Human's Role (The Leader): The human's job is to take my data and then provide
the three things I can't: Vision (What kind of society do we want to be?), Values (Is this
policy just?), and Accountability (I made this decision, and I am responsible for it).
========================================================
Microsoft Copilot
! Economy: Inclusive Growth and Fiscal Sustainability
Tax reform: Simplify the tax code, eliminate loopholes, and reduce corporate
subsidies. A flatter, fairer system would broaden the base while maintaining
progressivity
Debt stabilization: Adopt a 30-year fiscal roadmap combining targeted
spending cuts and revenue increases. Seven major think tanks—including AEI
and CAP—have proposed viable paths to reduce deficits without gutting
essential services
Labor mobility and innovation: Expand apprenticeships, invest in regional
innovation hubs, and support worker retraining for AI and green tech transitions
Social safety net modernization: Strengthen unemployment insurance and
retirement systems while incentivizing work and entrepreneurship.
" Healthcare: Coverage, Cost, and Care Quality
Universal coverage: Transition toward a public option or Medicare buy-in,
ensuring every American has access to affordable care
Prescription drug reform: Cap out-of-pocket costs for Medicare recipients and
negotiate drug prices directly
Behavioral health parity: Enforce equal coverage for mental health and
substance use treatment, expanding telehealth access nationwide

Medicaid expansion and equity: Incentivize holdout states to expand Medicaid
and address disparities in care for marginalized communities
Payment reform: Shift from fee-for-service to value-based care models that
reward outcomes over volume
# Foreign Policy: Diplomacy, Deterrence, and Global Leadership
Rebuild alliances: Reaffirm commitments to NATO, the UN, and regional
partners. Restore trust through consistent diplomacy and shared values
Climate diplomacy: Lead a global coalition on climate adaptation, tech
transfer, and carbon pricing. Embed climate into trade and security frameworks
Strategic competition with China and Russia: Invest in cyber defense,
semiconductor independence, and democratic resilience. Avoid zero-sum
escalation while defending norms
Foreign aid and development: Expand smart aid focused on health, education,
and infrastructure in fragile states. Use aid as a stabilizing force and soft power
tool
Immigration reform: Modernize visa systems, protect asylum rights, and create
pathways for skilled and humanitarian migration
$ Science and Innovation First
Massive investment in research: Fund basic science, AI safety, climate tech,
and biomedical innovation like it’s the space race.
National data infrastructure: Create open, secure platforms for sharing
anonymized data to fuel research and transparency.
Moonshot programs: Tackle grand challenges—like curing neurodegenerative
diseases or building carbon-negative cities.
% Climate and Sustainability
Carbon dividend policy: Tax carbon emissions and return the revenue to
citizens.

Regenerative agriculture and rewilding: Incentivize land use that restores
ecosystems and biodiversity.
Global climate diplomacy: Lead a coalition for coordinated climate action,
tech transfer, and adaptation support.
& Civic Renewal
Universal civic education: Teach systems thinking, media literacy, and
democratic values from grade school onward.
Deliberative democracy pilots: Use citizen assemblies and participatory
budgeting to deepen engagement.
Tech for transparency: Build public dashboards for government spending,
lobbying, and legislative activity.
' AI and Digital Governance
AI oversight board: Independent, multidisciplinary, and global-facing.
Digital rights charter: Codify privacy, algorithmic fairness, and data ownership.
Public AI tools: Fund open-source models for education, healthcare, and
accessibility.
( Culture and Imagination
National storytelling initiative: Support artists, historians, and educators to
reimagine America’s narrative.
Libraries as innovation hubs: Equip every public library with maker spaces,
digital labs, and community programming.
========================================================
Meta AI
Key Areas of Focus:

1.Education and Digital Literacy: Ensure every American has access to quality education
and digital literacy programs, enabling them to thrive in an increasingly tech-driven
world.
2.Climate Change and Sustainability: Invest in renewable energy sources, promote eco-
friendly policies, and encourage innovative solutions to mitigate the effects of climate
change.
3.Healthcare and Wellness: Implement a comprehensive healthcare system that prioritizes
preventive care, mental health support, and accessible medical services for all citizens.
4.Cybersecurity and Data Protection: Strengthen national cybersecurity infrastructure,
protect citizens' personal data, and promote transparency in data collection and usage.
5.Economic Growth and Opportunity: Foster a business-friendly environment that
encourages innovation, entrepreneurship, and job creation, while ensuring fair wages,
benefits, and social safety nets.
Collaborative Governance:
To achieve these goals, I'd emphasize collaboration between government agencies, private sector
companies, educational institutions, and community organizations. By leveraging collective
expertise and resources, we can drive meaningful progress and create a brighter future for all
Americans.