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Experts: Little Evidence China Fuels US Data Center Backlash
Wednesday, Jun 17, 2026
Experts say there’s scant proof that China is driving U.S. opposition to data centers: OpenAI flagged some China-origin accounts and AI-generated imagery but found no “meaningful breakout,” and Graphika reports it has “not yet seen evidence of organized or scaled influence operations.
” At the same time domestic resistance has surged—Heatmap found a majority favoring a moratorium and Public First ranked U.S. lowest in support among 15 countries—and investors and politicians (Kevin O’Leary, Senator Tom Cotton, House Energy and Commerce Republicans) are using a foreign‑influence narrative and pressing for investigations; watch whether that political momentum leads to policy action despite limited evidence of outside orchestration.
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1. Experts find little evidence China drives US anti-data-center movement
Republican lawmakers, investors, and OpenAI have pointed to China-linked social accounts and a Bitcoin Policy Institute report as drivers of rising US opposition to data centers.
WIRED’s reporting shows OpenAI flagged some China-origin accounts and AI-generated imagery, but concluded there was no “meaningful breakout,” while social analytics firm Graphika says it has “not yet seen evidence of organized or scaled influence operations.
” At the same time domestic resistance has surged: a Heatmap poll found more than half of Americans support a moratorium, and Public First reported the US had the lowest support for data centers among 15 countries.
Developers and political actors are already using the foreign-influence narrative—Kevin O’Leary circulated a Bitcoin Policy Institute graphic—and lawmakers including Senator Tom Cotton and House Energy and Commerce Republicans have pressed for investigations.
Key facts:
- OpenAI released a report flagging a cluster of China-origin accounts
- OpenAI said it found no evidence of a “meaningful breakout”
- Graphika analyst Dina Sadek reported no organized, scaled foreign campaigns
- Graphika noted two exceptions: AI-avatar network and some AI-image Facebook pages
- Heatmap poll: more than half of Americans support a moratorium
Why it matters: Framing local opposition as foreign meddling can blunt community and environmental complaints, benefiting developers and sympathetic politicians by reframing the debate.
That tactic risks marginalizing domestic organizers and could push regulators and law enforcement to prioritize probing external influence over addressing zoning, grid, and environmental concerns; watch for further evidence from social-analytics firms, how investors deploy the narrative, and any formal federal inquiries.