Anthropic Q1 lobby spending hits a record $1.6 million: Pentagon controversy spills into Washington, D.C.

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According to an April 21 report by Axios and U.S. federal lobbying disclosure filings, Anthropic’s lobbying spending in Washington, D.C. during the first quarter of 2026 reached $1.6 million, setting the highest single-quarter total in the company’s history; OpenAI spent $1 million in the same period, also hitting its own historical peak. Both AI industry leaders simultaneously boosted their lobbying budgets, reflecting that friction between the AI industry and the U.S. federal government has shifted from technical policy debates into a real battle over financial interests.

Background on Anthropic’s lobbying spending: Ongoing disputes with the Pentagon

Axios notes that Anthropic faced intense policy pressure in the first quarter, mainly because the company and the U.S. Department of Defense have continued to clash over the “acceptable use policy” red lines for its Claude model. Trump administration officials have repeatedly accused the company of being “woke” (political correctness-driven). The dispute has since moved into court proceedings.

To strengthen its voice in Washington, D.C., on April 13 Anthropic announced that it had hired Ballard Partners—a lobbying firm closely tied to the Trump government. The firm also served as behind-the-scenes support during Dario Amodei’s White House negotiations in the Anthropic Mythos incident, when the NSA bypassed the Pentagon’s blacklist.

List of disclosed lobbying topics

Anthropic’s Q1 lobbying topics disclosed to the U.S. House and Senate include: AI procurement, DoD procurement, supply chain risks, acceptable use policy (the core controversy), AI and national security, export controls, energy infrastructure, related legislative advocacy, and permits as well as permissions for infrastructure construction, among others.

The scope of topics ranges from “who uses the model and how it’s used” to compute power and energy, chip exports, and more—showing that Anthropic treats lobbying as a strategic investment covering the entire AI value chain, rather than a response to a single incident.

OpenAI also steps up in the same direction

OpenAI’s first-quarter lobbying spending of $1 million—also its highest level ever for the company—mirrors that peak. Both leading players refreshed their records in the same quarter, meaning the AI industry has fully entered the “Washington, D.C. lobbying contest” phase. OpenAI’s lobbying topics similarly include AI policy, regulation, and procurement, but the amount is 60% higher than the gap between it and Anthropic.

Industry significance: the AI policy war spreads from the White House to Congress

Previously, these two companies’ main policy interactions focused primarily on the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and the realm of executive orders. The spike in Q1 lobbying spending shows the battleground has expanded to both chambers of Congress—areas where the AI industry leaders must directly engage at the level of statutory language, including the year’s annual “National Defense Authorization Act,” AI procurement provisions, and revisions to export controls.

For the AI industry, lobbying budgets have shifted from “optional tools” to “formal operating costs.” Anthropic and the Pentagon’s public standoff is among the most indicative cases of the past six months; the $1.6 million spend is only the first-quarter investment corresponding to the cost of that friction.

This article, “Anthropic Q1 lobbying spending of $1.6 million sets a new high: Pentagon dispute extends to Washington, D.C.” first appeared on Lian News ABMedia.

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