Missouri Voters Ousted Officials After a $6 Billion AI Data Center Deal

Festus voters remove four incumbents who approved CRG’s 360-acre project despite resident opposition

Al Landes Avatar
Al Landes Avatar

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Image: Kateryna Levytska – Mezha

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Festus voters ousted four council incumbents after approving $6 billion AI data center
  • Nationwide resistance blocks $64 billion in AI infrastructure projects despite economic promises
  • AI data centers drive electricity consumption up 36% in Maine, sparking utility spikes

Dead phone batteries are annoying, but the massive data centers powering your AI photo edits are sparking genuine revolts. Festus, Missouri just proved this point dramatically—voters booted half their city council after officials approved a $6 billion AI infrastructure project that residents never wanted.

The Festus Fallout

All four incumbents lost reelection after approving controversial project with minimal public input.

The March 30, 2026 council vote was supposed to be routine—a 6-2 approval for CRG’s massive data center on 360 acres north of town. Officials pitched it as a “once-in-a-generation windfall” bringing $1.3 billion in taxes over 25 years. Instead, it became political suicide.

Over two dozen residents packed the meeting, furious about property buyout programs, noise concerns, and what felt like backroom dealing. When April elections arrived, every pro-data center incumbent got crushed. The opposition group Wake Up Jeffco didn’t just win—they dominated.

National Pattern Emerges

Communities nationwide reject AI infrastructure despite economic promises.

Festus isn’t alone in this revolt. Similar council ousters hit Independence, Missouri. Wisconsin voters blocked projects through ballot measures. Boulder City, Nevada and Maryland counties faced protests. The resistance has turned violent—Indianapolis councilman Ron Gibson found shots fired at his home with a “No Data Centers” note attached.

The economic impact is staggering: $64 billion in projects now blocked or delayed nationwide. Your favorite AI features require enormous electricity—data centers now consume 5% of U.S. power, up from 2% a decade ago. That translates to utility spikes hitting 36% in Maine and 13-14% across New York, Los Angeles, and Washington. These infrastructure issues often lead to various computer problems for residents.

Consumer Reality Check

The infrastructure behind smartphone AI features is reshaping American towns.

Every time you enhance a photo or ask Siri a question, you’re tapping into these contested data centers. The AI features we rely on daily require this massive infrastructure. The irony is stark—61% of Americans tell Gallup that AI destroys more jobs than it creates, yet we’re addicted to the services requiring this infrastructure.

Festus residents now face a lawsuit challenging the approval, alleging illegal rezoning and secret meetings. Text records revealed officials dismissing opponents as “uneducated” and needing to be “herded.” A recall petition targets the mayor and remaining pro-data center council members. The message is clear: communities want control over how AI’s physical footprint lands in their backyards.

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