Data centers are on the ballot in 2026 — and just…

Data centers are on the ballot in 2026 — and just…


There’s nothing like a common enemy to bring people together. This midterm election year, that enemy may be data centers.

As AI grows more powerful and more popular, tech companies are rushing to build facilities that house all that computing capability — and to secure tons of power to run them. But no one knows exactly how many of those data centers will get constructed, and how much electricity they’ll need. That’s a problem for utility customers, who may be saddled with the costs and climate impacts of an unnecessary gas power and grid infrastructure buildout.

Some states are tackling the problem with what are known as large-load tariffs: essentially, special rates and requirements that force big power users to shoulder the costs of grid buildouts. But this week, a small city in Wisconsin put its foot down. Port Washington, a suburb of Milwaukee, voted by a roughly 2-to-1 margin to require that city leaders get voter approval before awarding tax breaks to data centers and other large development projects. It’s a clear response to the $15 billion OpenAI and Oracle megaproject that’s being built in the city, though this newly approved measure comes too late to affect that project.

At the federal level, Democrats have spearheaded most of the campaigns against data centers, with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) even proposing a nationwide moratorium. But Port Washington is part of Ozaukee County, which has voted for Republicans over the past 20-plus years of elections.

Also this week, residents in Festus, Missouri, voted to oust every incumbent on their City Council, in large part because the decision-makers had approved a controversial $6 billion data center in the area. Jefferson County, where the city is situated, voted overwhelmingly for Republicans in the 2024 elections.

Indianapolis, meanwhile, saw a more violent reaction: Someone fired over a dozen bullets at City Council member Ron Gibson’s home on Monday, and left a note reading No Data Centers” on the legislator’s doorstep. Gibson is a Democrat who has publicly supported a data center project in the city.

Across the U.S., more data center questions are on the ballot. Residents in Monterey Park, California, will determine in June whether to completely ban construction of the facilities. In the fall, Boulder City, Nevada, will vote on whether a municipally owned plot should host a data center, and residents in Janesville, Wisconsin, will decide whether to add more hurdles to a project turning a former General Motors plant into a data center.

City-level data center restrictions like Port Washington’s certainly don’t have the heft of state-level bans or even a nationwide moratorium, as far-fetched as its passage may be. But they do show that data center opposition is on the rise in every nook and cranny of the country — and it may have a massive influence on more than just local elections this November.

More big energy stories

Clean Energy Team dominates Arizona utility election

Arizona voters this week selected a slate of candidates known as the Clean Energy Team to run the state’s largest public utility, the Salt River Project.

The winners may have Turning Point USA, the Charlie Kirk–founded conservative organization, to thank. The SRP delivers power and water to more than 1 million customers in the Phoenix area, and its leaders are chosen through an unusual election in which the number of acres a customer owns determines how many votes they can cast. These races typically don’t get much turnout, but this year, Turning Point stepped in to endorse candidates who supported converting retiring coal plants to gas. That prompted clean energy advocates, including the Sierra Club and actor and advocate Jane Fonda, to get involved.

All that attention definitely juiced turnout: This year’s election saw four times as many ballots as 2024’s, The New York Times reports. Two Turning Point–backed candidates did win races for SRP’s board presidency and vice presidency. But candidates who support clean energy swept the remaining races to take majority control of the board and double their representation on SRP’s advisory council.



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