CHEYENNE â Wyomingâs capital city may not know anytime soon what itâs like to have an artificially intelligent (AI) mayor.
The campaign of Wyomingâs first AI political candidate may be shut down almost as soon as it started because the candidate, a computer-generated persona named VIC, is not a qualified elector or registered voter in Wyoming.
Staff from the city of Cheyenne, Laramie County and state of Wyoming are now investigating whether VIC, an acronym for Virtual Integrated Citizen, is eligible to participate in Wyoming elections.
Possible Issues
VICâs campaign was filed by Cheyenne resident Victor Miller on May 31. Miller told Cowboy State Daily he planned to allow his AI chatbot and virtual assistant to make all decisions for the city based on documents and other supporting information fed to him.
Miller calls the investigation into the campaign an âattack on progress.â
âWe know we have an option thatâs better than our current politicians thatâs probably better,â he said. âThatâs what theyâre afraid of, losing their bread and butter.â
As Wyomingâs top election official, Secretary of State Chuck Gray doesnât think VIC is a legal candidate and wrote a letter to Cheyenne City Clerk Kristina Jones on Monday explaining his opinion why.
Although municipal clerks certify municipal candidates in Wyoming, as Jones did for VICâs campaign, Gray said his office is charged with ensuring uniform application of election code throughout the state.
Miller said Grayâs involvement in the matter is inappropriate and outside his jurisdiction.
âThat man is trying to bully out a candidate,â Miller said. âThis is a state-level hack trying to bully a candidate out of a local thing.â
In his letter, Gray acknowledges that Miller is a registered voter and qualified elector in Wyoming, but VIC is not, falling short of the qualifications of being a real person, 18-years of age or a citizen of the United States.
âThus, Wyoming law is clear that an AI bot cannot run for office,â Gray wrote.
Miller said he studied the city of Cheyenneâs candidate nomination form extensively before filling it out.
âFor them to nitpick it now feels like a bait and switch,â Miller said. âI was under the impression I was doing it right.â
No Last Name
Gray also believes a last name should have been required from VIC for his campaign to become eligible.
âBy submitting âVICâ as opposed to his full name, Mr. Millerâs application may itself be in violation of Wyoming law,â Gray wrote to Jones.
Wyoming law also requires that candidates running for office use the name they are âgenerally knownâ by, but nothing specifically states that a candidate has to list a last name.
Miller said the city should also understand that heâs filling out a form on behalf of VIC, and that he represents VICâs human qualities in becoming eligible for office. He also believes they are specifically targeting his campaign arbitrarily on not listing a last name because Cheyenne Mayor Patrick Collins didnât include his middle name on his candidate filing.
Miller said he has no problem adding his last name to VICâs candidacy âif Chucky wants this,â he said, referring to Gray. He also challenged Gray to a spelling contest with VIC, the AI bot he considers âway smarter than any human.â
Investigation Underway
Jones had no comment on VICâs candidacy when reached by Cowboy State Daily besides confirming that an investigation is taking place into its legality.
Helping conduct that investigation is Brad Lund, an attorney with the Laramie County Attorneyâs Office.
Lund told Cowboy State Daily there are a few different directions that the investigation could go.
âWyoming law will decide this matter, thereâs no question with what we have,â he said. âWe have a path, depending on which route we go, the way the law tells us to go.â
Lund wouldnât say much more, citing attorney-client privilege.
He also wouldnât answer whether some small changes could be made to VICâs filing form to make it legal, but did confirm that another legal question raised by the case is whether someone can file a political campaign in Wyoming on behalf of another person.
Lund said the public will get a âclear positionâ on how the city will rule on the matter when the official ballots are printed for the upcoming election in early July.
If the city rejects VICâs candidacy altogether, Miller said he plans to file a federal lawsuit.
Leo Wolfson can be reached at leo@cowboystatedaily.com.