Tatishe M. Nteta

Provost Professor of Political Science / Director of UMass Poll University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Amherst MA

Tatishe Nteta's research lies at the intersection of the politics of race and ethnicity, public opinion, and political behavior.

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Poll finds bipartisan agreement on a key issue: Regulating AI

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.  Read the original article here. In the run-up to the vote in the U.S. Senate on President Donald Trump’s spending and tax bill, Republicans scrambled to revise the bill to win support of wavering GOP senators. A provision included in the original bill was a 10-year moratorium on any state law that sought to regulate artificial intelligence. The provision denied access to US$500 million in federal funding for broadband internet and AI infrastructure projects for any state that passed any such law. The inclusion of the AI regulation moratorium was widely viewed as a win for AI firms that had expressed fears that states passing regulations on AI would hamper the development of the technology. However, many federal and state officials from both parties, including state attorneys general, state legislators and 17 Republican governors, publicly opposed the measure. In the last hours before the passage of the bill, the Senate struck down the provision by a resounding 99-1 vote. In an era defined by partisan divides on issues such as immigration, health care, social welfare, gender equality, race relations and gun control, why are so many Republican and Democratic political leaders on the same page on the issue of AI regulation? Whatever motivated lawmakers to permit AI regulation, our recent poll shows that they are aligned with the majority of Americans who view AI with trepidation, skepticism and fear, and who want the emerging technology regulated. Bipartisan sentiments We are political scientists who use polls to study partisan polarization in the United States, as well as the areas of agreement that bridge the divide that has come to define U.S. politics. In April 2025, we fielded a nationally representative poll that sought to capture what Americans think about AI, including what they think AI will mean for the economy and society going forward. The public is generally pessimistic. We found that 65% of Americans said they believe AI will increase the spread of false information. Fifty-six percent of Americans worry AI will threaten the future of humanity. Fewer than 3 in 10 Americans told us AI will make them more productive (29%), make people less lonely (21%) or improve the economy (22%). While Americans tend to be deeply divided along partisan lines on most issues, the apprehension regarding AI’s impact on the future appears to be relatively consistent across Republicans and Democrats. For example, only 19% of Republicans and 22% of Democrats said they believe that artificial intelligence will make people less lonely. Respondents across the parties are in lockstep when it comes to their views on whether AI will make them personally more productive, with only 29% − both Republicans and Democrats − agreeing. And 60% of Democrats and 53% Republicans said they believe AI will threaten the future of humanity. On the question of whether artificial intelligence should be strictly regulated by the government, we found that close to 6 in 10 Americans (58%) agree with this sentiment. Given the partisan differences in support for governmental regulation of business, we expected to find evidence of a partisan divide on this question. However, our data finds that Democrats and Republicans are of one mind on AI regulation, with majorities of both Democrats (66%) and Republicans (54%) supporting strict AI regulation. When we take into account demographic and political characteristics such as race, educational attainment, gender identity, income, ideology and age, we again find that partisan identity has no significant impact on opinion regarding the regulation of AI. State of anxiety In the years ahead, the debate over AI and the government’s role in regulating it is likely to intensify, on both the state and federal levels. As each day seems to bring new advances in AI’s capability and reach, the future is shaping up to be one in which human beings coexist – and hopefully flourish – alongside AI. This new reality has made the American public, both Democrats and Republicans, justifiably nervous, and our polling captures this widespread trepidation. Lawmakers and technology leaders alike could address this anxiety by better communicating the pitfalls and potential of AI, and take seriously the concerns of the public. After all, the public is not alone in its trepidation. Many experts in the field also have substantial worries about the future of AI. One of the fundamental political questions moving forward, then, will be to what degree regulators put guardrails on this emerging and transformative technology in order to protect Americans from AI’s negative consequences. Adam Eichen is a doctoral candidate in political science at UMass Amherst. Alexander Theodoridis is associate professor of political science and co-director of the UMass Amherst Poll at UMass Amherst. Sara M. Kirshbaum is a postdoctoral fellow and lecturer of political science at UMass Amherst. Tatishe Nteta is provost professor of political science and director of the UMass Amherst Poll at UMass Amherst.

Tatishe M. NtetaAlexander Theodoridis

Expertise

Political Polls
American Politics
Politics and Political Analysis
Race Culture and Ethnicity
Polling

Biography

Tatishe Nteta directs the UMass Amherst Poll, combining the latest Internet polling technology, conducted through YouGov, with leading political science expertise in both Massachusetts and national affairs. Nteta’s research interests lie at the intersection of the politics of race and ethnicity, public opinion and political behavior. His work examines the impact of changing demographics and shifts in the sociopolitical incorporation of racial minorities on the contours of American race relations, policy preferences and participation.

Social Media

Video

Education

University of California, Berkeley

Ph.D.

Political Science

University of Maryland

B.A.

African American Studies and Government and Politics

Select Recent Media Coverage

Trump Claims a ‘Historic’ Mandate. Polls Show Americans Have Mixed Feelings.

The New York Times  online

2024-12-06

Tatishe Nteta, director of the UMass Poll, says poll findings do not support President-elect Trump’s claims that he has been given a historic mandate. Recent UMass Polls showed that Americans hold nuanced views on some of the issues Trump plans to tackle or are unsure how they feel about them.

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The Polls Weren’t Wrong: The public just doesn’t understand what they mean.

Slate  online

2024-11-10

Tatishe Nteta, director of the UMass Poll, says pre-election polls were not wrong. “Polls are not predictive. Polls are snapshots of where the public is at the moment, and should be used to explain first and foremost,” Nteta says.

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Kamala Harris's Rebranding Could Make Her 'More Sympathetic'

Newsweek  online

2024-07-16

Tatishe Nteta is quoted in an article about efforts to “rebrand” Vice President Kamala Harris using moments that have gone viral on social media. “It relays the fact that this is a longtime politician, a former prosecutor who definitely has a hard edge. But she is able and willing to reflect on the fact that she is both a politician ... but also has a personal life,” he says.

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Question 1 delivered a harsh verdict on the Legislature

CommonWealth Beacon

Tatishe Nteta, Jesse Rhodes, and Adam Eichen

2024-12-02

UMass Amherst political scientists Tatishe Nteta, Jesse Rhodes and Adam Eichen write that the overwhelming passage of Massachusetts ballot Question 1 has delivered “a stunning rebuke of the Democratic Party. ”The measure, which is facing a possible challenge, grants the state auditor the authority to audit the Massachusetts Legislature, which Democrats control.

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Yes, sexism among Republican voters helped sink Nikki Haley’s presidential campaign

The Conversation

Tatishe Nteta, Adam Eichen, esse Rhodes

2024-03-12

Tatishe Nteta argues that sexism among Republican voters helped sink Nikki Haley’s presidential campaign.

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Family Ties? The Limits of Fathering Daughters on Congressional Behavior

American Politics Research

Mia Costa1, Jill S. Greenlee, Tatishe Nteta, Jesse H. Rhodes, Elizabeth A. Sharrow

2019-02-04

Scholars have long suggested that familial life can affect political behavior and, more recently, have found that fathering daughters leads men to adopt more liberal positions on gender equality policies. However, few have focused on the impact of fathering a daughter on congressional behavior, particularly in an era of heightened partisan polarization.

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