Global lawmakers call for urgent AI regulation to avert workforce crisis

NEW DELHI, INDIA — Lawmakers and policymakers from democratic nations convened at the NXT Conclave 2026 to address the urgent challenges posed by artificial intelligence (AI), warning that governments must act swiftly to establish regulatory frameworks and prepare workforces for widespread job displacement.
The Sunday Guardian reports that the panel, which included representatives from Finland, France, and Ireland, emphasized that while AI holds transformative potential across sectors such as healthcare and defense, its unregulated adoption threatens to outpace existing ethical and labor protections.
The dual-use nature of AI demands swift regulatory action
Timo Harakka, a member of the Eduskunta in Finland, denounced the overemphasis on communication-based AI, arguing that scientific AI “help us solve the huge problems of humanity, including the climate crisis.”
“For any new technology, it’s always overhyped in the short term and underestimated in the medium to long term.”
He pointed out that the short-term effects of new technologies are hyped. In contrast, their long-term needs are consistently underestimated, and it is always important to proactively prepare all fields, including agriculture and health.
At the same time, legislators also sounded the alarm about the ethical aspects of AI in warfare, namely, autonomous weapons.
“Autonomous-level weapons have existed before AI, but with AI, drones can avoid jamming and operate autonomously. Decisions about their use must be taken at the international level,” said Lucretia Saint-Paul, a French National Assembly deputy.
She requested ethical norms on a global basis to ensure that AI-enabled systems will not autonomously be used to attack human beings, but decisions regarding such weapons have to be taken on the international level, which will preserve democratic values.
Workforce displacement necessitates investment in retraining
The panel suggested that the process of job displacement has already begun in white-collar industries and that governments should implement education and retraining programs to help workers remain competitive.
Malcolm Byrne, a member of the Irish Dáil Éireann, provided one such commentary, stating that his country had established an AI observatory to track workforce changes and introduced micro-credential programs to help citizens upskill.
He states, “There is going to be huge job displacement, and it’s already starting to happen, particularly in white-collar employment. But doctors who use AI will replace doctors who don’t. Lawyers who use AI will replace lawyers who don’t.”
The speakers emphasized the need to integrate digital literacy in elementary education to protect democratic practices.
Saint-Paul clarified the introduction of digital maturity initiatives for children and algorithmic consent frameworks in France, which is why he drew a direct parallel between the failures of regulation in the internet era and the modern arguments related to AI.
She pointed out that, as the internet developed, no agreed-upon rules of engagement were emerging, and emphasized that countries could not afford to repeat that error by preemptively training and imposing regulatory guardrails on AI.
As global lawmakers warn that unregulated AI adoption is already displacing white-collar workers and risks repeating the internet era’s regulatory failures, the future of work now hinges on whether governments can move swiftly to pair ethical guardrails with large-scale retraining initiatives that transform workforce disruption into a managed evolution rather than a crisis.

Independent




