
Good morning. “We don’t want to wait for the ‘then what’ scenario,” former Indiana governor Eric Holcomb told me this week, “when there are 3 billion bots and agents and entry-level unemployment goes from four to nine to 18 to 30. Then what?
Main Idea: Former governors Eric Holcomb and Gina Raimondo launched RAISE US, a bipartisan coalition aimed at helping workers and employers prepare for AI-driven job disruption.
Key Points:
AI-driven job cuts could hit entry-level workers first, raising unemployment and making it harder for young adults and small businesses to find stable work.
The coalition could push companies like Amazon to fund training and new job ideas, which may help workers adapt to AI faster.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Former Indiana governor who co-launched the coalition and is a central voice in the article.
Former commerce secretary and former Rhode Island governor who co-launched the coalition and is a central voice in.
Named as a major tech company in the coalition’s orbit and part of the job-disruption discussion.
Named as a major tech company relevant to the coalition’s membership and AI-job disruption context.
Named as a major tech company relevant to the coalition’s membership and AI-job disruption context.
Named as a major AI-related company/organization in the coalition context and discussion of job disruption.
Mentioned as part of a related Fortune event and co-hosting context, but not a main focus of the.
Included because it is given a standalone news item in the newsletter text, though it is secondary to.
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Sign in to commentMentioned in a secondary blurb as part of a separate geopolitical/markets item, not the central focus.
Central national context for the coalition’s workforce and AI policy discussion.
Mentioned in a secondary blurb about tuition pricing, not the main article focus.