Current:Home > ContactOliver James Montgomery-What to know about Trump strategist’s embrace of AI to help conservatives -Blueprint Money Mastery
Oliver James Montgomery-What to know about Trump strategist’s embrace of AI to help conservatives
FinLogic FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-05 22:36:27
FORT LAUDERDALE,Oliver James Montgomery Fla. (AP) — Brad Parscale was the digital guru behind Donald Trump’s surprise victory in the 2016 election and was promoted to manage the 2020 campaign. But he didn’t last long on that job: His personal life unraveled in public and he later texted a friend that he felt “guilty” for helping Trump win after the riot at the U.S. Capitol.
He’s since become an evangelist about the power of artificial intelligence to transform how Republicans run political campaigns. And his company is working for Trump’s 2024 bid, trying to help the presumptive Republican nominee take back the White House from Democratic President Joe Biden.
Here’s what to know about Parscale and his new role:
NEW AI-POWERED CAMPAIGN TOOLS
Parscale says his company, Campaign Nucleus, can use AI to help generate customized emails, parse oceans of data to gauge voter sentiment and find persuadable voters. It can also amplify the social media posts of “anti-woke” influencers, according to an Associated Press review of Parscale’s public statements, his company documents, slide decks, marketing materials and other records not previously made public.
Soon, Parscale says, his company will deploy an app that harnesses AI to assist campaigns in collecting absentee ballots in the same way drivers for DoorDash or Grubhub pick up dinners from restaurants and deliver them to customers.
FROM UNKNOWN TO TRUMP CONFIDANT
Parscale was a relatively unknown web designer in San Antonio, Texas, when he was hired to build a web presence for Trump’s family business.
That led to a job on the future president’s 2016 campaign. He was one of its first hires and spearheaded an unorthodox digital strategy, teaming up with scandal-plagued Cambridge Analytica to help propel Trump to the White House.
“I pretty much used Facebook to get Trump elected in 2016,” Parscale said in a 2022 podcast interview.
Following Trump’s surprise win, Parscale’s influence grew. He was promoted to manage Trump’s reelection bid and enjoyed celebrity status. A towering figure at 6 feet, 8 inches with a Viking-style beard, Parscale was frequently spotted at campaign rallies taking selfies with Trump supporters and signing autographs.
Parscale was replaced as campaign manager not long after a rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, drew an unexpectedly small crowd, enraging Trump.
ROLE IN 2024 CAMPAIGN
Since last year, Campaign Nucleus and other Parscale-linked companies have been paid more than $2.2 million by the Trump campaign, the Republican National Committee and their related political action and fundraising committees, campaign finance records show.
Parscale did not respond to questions from the AP about what he’s doing for the Trump campaign. Trump has called artificial intelligence “so scary” and “dangerous,” while his campaign, which has shied away from highlighting Parscale’s role, said in an emailed statement that it did not “engage or utilize” tools supplied by any AI company.
Parscale-linked companies have been paid to host websites, send emails, provide fundraising software and digital consulting, campaign finance records show.
The Biden campaign and Democrats are also also using AI. So far, they said they are primarily deploying the technology to help them find and motivate voters and to better identify and overcome deceptive content.
TIES TO A WEALTHY GOP DONOR
Last year, Parscale bought property in Midland, Texas, in the heart of the nation’s highest-producing oil and gas fields. It is also the hometown of Tim Dunn, a billionaire born-again evangelical who is among the state’s most influential political donors.
In April of last year, Dunn invested $5 million in a company called AiAdvertising that once bought one of Parscale’s firms under a previous corporate name. The San Antonio-based ad firm also announced that Parscale was joining as a strategic adviser, to be paid $120,000 in stock and a monthly salary of $10,000.
“Boom!” Parscale tweeted. “(AiAdvertising) finally automated the full stake of technologies used in the 2016 election that changed the world.”
AiAdvertising added two key national figures to its board: Texas investor Thomas Hicks Jr. — former co-chair of the RNC and longtime hunting buddy of Donald Trump Jr. — and former GOP congressman Jim Renacci. In January, Dunn gave AiAdvertising an additional $2.5 million via an invesment company, and AiAdvertising said in a news release that the cash infusion would help it “generate more engaging, higher-impact campaigns.”
Dunn declined to comment, and AiAdvertising did not respond to messages seeking comment.
PARSCALE’S VISION
Parscale occasionally offers glimpses of the AI future he envisions. Casting himself as an outsider to the Republican establishment, he has said he sees AI as a way to undercut elite Washington consultants, whom he described as political parasites.
In January, Parscale told a crowd assembled at a grassroots Christian event in a Pasadena, California, church that their movement needed “to have our own AI, from creative large language models and creative imagery, we need to reach our own audiences with our own distribution, our own email systems, our own texting systems, our own ability to place TV ads, and lastly we need to have our own influencers.”
—-
Burke reported from San Francisco. AP National Political Writer Steve Peoples in Washington and Associated Press researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.
—-
This story is part of an Associated Press series, “The AI Campaign,” that explores the influence of artificial intelligence in the 2024 election cycle.
—-
Contact AP’s global investigative team at [email protected] or https://www.ap.org/tips/
—-
The Associated Press receives financial assistance from the Omidyar Network to support coverage of artificial intelligence and its impact on society. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org
veryGood! (381)
Related
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Traffic resumes through Baltimore’s busy port after $100M cleanup of collapsed bridge
- The internet's latest crush is charming – and confusing – all of TikTok. Leave him alone.
- Fans sentenced to prison for racist insults directed at soccer star Vinícius Júnior in first-of-its-kind conviction
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- MLB's most affordable ballparks: Which stadiums offer the most bang for your buck?
- Operations of the hotly contested East Coast natural gas pipeline can begin, regulators say
- Supermarket gunman’s lawyers say he should be exempt from the death penalty because he was 18
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Russian military exercises in the Caribbean: Here's what to expect
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Missouri set to execute death row inmate David Hosier for 2009 murders after governor denies clemency
- Queer and compelling: 11 LGBTQ+ books for Pride you should be reading right now
- The Daily Money: Is inflation taming our spending?
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- North Carolina lawmakers approve mask bill that allows health exemption after pushback
- Gas prices are falling along with demand, despite arrival of summer
- Supreme Court has a lot of work to do and little time to do it with a sizeable case backlog
Recommendation
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
Titan Sub Tragedy: Log of Passengers' Final Words That Surfaced Online Found to Be Fake
Thefts of charging cables pose yet another obstacle to appeal of electric vehicles
Bill would rename NYC subway stop after Stonewall, a landmark in LGBTQ+ rights movement
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Man charged after firing gun at birthday party, shooting at sheriff's helicopter, prosecutors say
Elon Musk drops lawsuit against ChatGPT-maker OpenAI without explanation
Sam Brown, Jacky Rosen win Nevada Senate primaries to set up November matchup