SIGNAL
Tracking the global AI frontier — labs · research · agents · policy
Frontier Signal
Briefing

Most major AI chatbots still lean left on political questions, even "anti-woke" models are no exception

A Washington Post investigation shows that most major AI chatbots still skew left on political questions. OpenAI's GPT-5.5 gave exclusively left-leaning arguments 80 percent of the time, and even Musk's Grok, marketed as anti-"woke," leaned left more often than not. The one outlier: Google's Gemini 3.1 Pro presented both sides 93 percent of the time. The article Most major AI chatbots still lean left on political questions, even "anti-woke" models are no exception appeared fir

Most major AI chatbots still lean left on political questions, even "anti-woke" models are no exception
Primary source the-decoder.com ↗

Published June 25, 2026 · Category: AI Briefing

Overview

A Washington Post investigation shows that most major AI chatbots still skew left on political questions. OpenAI's GPT-5.5 gave exclusively left-leaning arguments 80 percent of the time, and even Musk's Grok, marketed as anti-"woke," leaned left more often than not. The one outlier: Google's Gemini 3.1 Pro presented both sides 93 percent of the time.

Details

The article Most major AI chatbots still lean left on political questions, even "anti-woke" models are no exception appeared first on The Decoder.

Source

Originally published at the-decoder.com.

Related Articles

F
Frontier Signal Desk

Frontier Signal tracks the global AI frontier — labs, research, agents, creation tools and real-world practice — straight from primary sources. Tip the desk: editorial@news.tunx.ai

Email the desk →
From our network: explore the AI assistant platform behind this site. Visit tunx.ai →
Note: This story is aggregated and summarized from the primary source linked above; the original publisher retains all rights. Details may evolve after publication — always confirm against the source. Nothing here is professional, legal or investment advice.

Related Stories

More from Briefing →