NDP Front-Runner Sparks National Debate with “Humans-First” AI Policy
As the race to lead the federal NDP intensifies, candidate Avi Lewis has thrown down a radical gauntlet, calling for an immediate moratorium on the construction of artificial intelligence data centres across Canada. In a move that directly challenges the Liberal government’s pro-tech agenda, Lewis unveiled his “Humans-First AI Policy” this week, warning that unchecked generative AI threatens to gut the Canadian labour market and deplete critical natural resources.
The platform marks a significant pivot in the leadership contest, positioning Lewis as a fierce critic of “multi-billion-dollar corporate products” like ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini, which he claims are built on the back of mass worker displacement.
The “Humans-First” Manifesto: A Pause on Digital Expansion
At the heart of Lewis’s proposal is a demand to halt the expansion of the massive data centres required to power generative AI. Unlike standard machine learning used in medical research, Lewis distinguishes generative AI as a “successful technology” only when it achieves productivity gains through the firing of millions of workers.
To enforce this moratorium, the Lewis campaign suggests the federal government utilize every available lever—including the withdrawal of millions in federal funding and amending the Canadian Environmental Protection Act to strictly regulate water usage. This “wait-and-see” approach is intended to allow Canadian regulations and democratic debate to catch up with a technology Lewis argues has been “unleashed” without public consent.
Environmental Toll: Thirsty Servers and Power Grids
The environmental cost of Canada’s AI boom is a central pillar of the Lewis campaign’s opposition. Data centres are notoriously “thirsty,” requiring vast amounts of water and energy to cool servers that generate extreme heat.
- Local Impact: A single Microsoft data centre complex in Vaughan, Ont., is projected to consume 730 million litres of water annually.
- National Strain: Another facility in Etobicoke is approved to use nearly 40 litres per second—the equivalent of 1.2 billion litres a year, or roughly 500 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
- Global Projection: The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates that global data centre water consumption could reach 1,200 billion litres by 2030.
Fellow candidates have echoed these concerns; Heather McPherson has called for strict limits on power allocation to data centres, while Tony McQuail warns that AI is an “extension of our addiction to machinery” with devastating costs to communities.
Political Firestorm: The “Carney Conflict”
Lewis’s platform also personalizes the struggle, levelling sharp accusations at Prime Minister Mark Carney. Lewis alleges a “massive conflict of interest,” pointing to Carney’s shares held in a blind trust for Brookfield—a company with heavy investments in AI infrastructure.
While the Prime Minister’s Office has not issued a formal rebuttal to the specific allegation, Carney addressed the “tightrope” of AI in a recent speech from Quebec City. He argued that while AI creates tensions around fairness and inclusion, it offers “enormous opportunities” for the federal public service, education, and healthcare, provided it is governed to “work for all”.
National Impact: The Future of Canadian Labour
The debate comes at a precarious time for the Canadian workforce. Recent reports from the Conference Board of Canada (rebranding as Signal49 Research) project that AI could cost the country 555,000 jobs by 2030 before a potential economic rebound.
For the NDP, the issue remains a fracture point. While some members see generative AI as an existential threat to unions, others believe the technology can be harnessed with the right guardrails. Lewis’s plan prioritizes “human access” to services, including a “human guarantee” that Canadians will always be able to reach a real person when accessing federal services, rather than a chatbot.
As Canadians head toward a pivotal 2026, the NDP leadership race is no longer just about party policy—it is a referendum on whether Canada will lead the AI revolution or lead the resistance against it.





