Man and AI robot waiting for a job interview

Americans Oppose Replacing Corporate Leaders With AI

A new survey shows most U.S. adults reject artificial intelligence in executive roles, favoring human accountability.

Algorithms are unlikely to take over corporate leadership roles anytime soon if the American public has a say.

A recent survey of 2,180 U.S. adults revealed that most Americans oppose replacing C-suite executives—including chief executive officers, chief financial officers and chief information security officers—with artificial intelligence. While respondents generally accepted AI as a tool to improve business decisions, they overwhelmingly rejected the idea of automation taking ultimate responsibility for corporate actions.

The survey, conducted by Watch Chest, indicated that opposition spans across major demographic lines, including gender, age, income and region.

Women showed the strongest resistance to AI executives, with nearly 74.81% stating that humans should remain in leadership roles. By contrast, men were more divided, though a slight majority still favored human executives over automated ones.

The study highlighted a desire for human accountability, even though top executives face frequent public criticism for high salaries and corporate layoffs. Analysts suggest that the public connects leadership with ethics, blame and decision-making under pressure. When a company mismanages customer data or cuts jobs, consumers want a human executive who can be questioned or held responsible.

Surprising trends emerged among younger generations, who are typically seen as early tech adopters. Only about 20.90% of adults aged 18 to 29 supported AI leadership. Support peaked instead among older cohorts, with 38% of those aged 30 to 44 and nearly 41.79% of those aged 45 to 60 backing the shift. Only about 16.78% of seniors aged 61 and older supported AI executives.

Income also heavily influenced perspectives, with acceptance of AI leadership rising alongside household earnings. The only demographic with majority support consisted of individuals earning between $150,000 and $199,999, where 54.57% favored AI executives. Conversely, only 16.36% of respondents earning under $50,000 supported the transition.

Geographically, the Midwest showed the highest resistance, with 81.87% opposing AI leadership. The West demonstrated the highest acceptance at 42.54%, followed by the Northeast at 37.89% and the South at 29.83%.

The data was gathered via SurveyMonkey and weighted to match U.S. census statistics for age, gender, income and region. The poll has a margin of error of 2.10 percentage points at a 95% confidence level.

About the Author

Jesse Jacobs is assistant editor of SecurityToday.com.

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