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Manhattan Today
By the People, for the People
NY Congressional Candidate Faced Palantir Sexual Comments Claim
Alex Bores says he quit Palantir over moral objections to its ICE work, now faces attacks from AI industry PAC.
Published on Feb. 13, 2026
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Alex Bores, a New York assemblyman running in a crowded Democratic primary for a congressional seat in Manhattan, says he quit his job as an engineer at Palantir Technologies in 2019 due to moral objections over the company's work for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Bores' stance on Palantir and AI regulation has made him a target of the AI industry and a political action committee that has already spent over $1 million on ads criticizing him.
Why it matters
Bores' experience at Palantir and his platform of boosting AI regulation have become central to his congressional campaign. However, the AI industry and a well-funded PAC are pushing back against his messaging, highlighting the tensions between the tech sector and political candidates seeking to rein in certain AI practices.
The details
Bores says he quit his job as an engineer at Palantir in 2019 due to moral objections over the company's work with ICE. This stance has become a key part of his congressional campaign platform, which includes a focus on increasing regulation of artificial intelligence. Bores' position has made him a target of the AI industry and a PAC that has already spent over $1 million on ads criticizing him.
- Bores quit his job at Palantir in 2019.
- Bores is currently running in a crowded Democratic primary for a congressional seat in Manhattan.
The players
Alex Bores
A New York assemblyman running in a crowded Democratic primary for a congressional seat in Manhattan.
Palantir Technologies Inc.
A data analytics company that Bores previously worked for as an engineer.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
A federal law enforcement agency that Palantir has done work for, which was a source of moral objection for Bores.
AI industry
The broader technology industry focused on artificial intelligence, which has pushed back against Bores' platform of increased AI regulation.
Political action committee (PAC)
A group that has spent over $1 million on ads criticizing Bores and his positions on Palantir and AI.
The takeaway
Bores' experience at Palantir and his platform of increased AI regulation have become central to his congressional campaign, but he is facing significant pushback from the tech industry and a well-funded PAC that are seeking to counter his messaging and policy positions.

