Artificial intelligence is reshaping how we live and how we make collective decisions. As Luciano Floridi — philosopher and Professor of Philosophy and Ethics of Information at the University of Oxford — argues, the key challenge is no longer whether AI will continue to develop, which is largely unavoidable, but how to steer it towards the public good.
This ethical question also arises in parliamentary settings, when parliamentary administrations introduce AI systems to support internal work. Alongside the promise of greater efficiency lies a core issue: the effect these technologies may have on the democratic functions of elected assemblies.
If AI begins to influence, or potentially displace, aspects of the traditional law-making process, the central question becomes whether responsibility for the final vote on a law — or any parliamentary act — remains firmly with elected representatives or shifts, even indirectly, towards AI systems. Against this backdrop of opportunities and risks, this article maps the main AI tools being developed in parliaments and reflects on how Italy’s Chamber of Deputies and Senate are responding.
A fragmented global landscape:
To understand Italy’s approach to this issue, it is useful to look beyond the national context. So far, the adoption of AI in parliaments has been concentrated mainly in highly developed countries and has not been accompanied by a shared regulatory framework. The result is a fragmented landscape in which technological development and regulation are largely shaped by individual parliaments or EU institutions.
In practice, each parliament is adopting one or more AI tools according to internal priorities, with potentially significant implications for institutional organisation and the conduct of democratic deliberation.
Some applications are designed for internal use, supporting parliamentary staff, MPs and legislative committees. Others are outward-facing, aiming to enhance transparency, accessibility and citizen participation.
Some tools affect the legislative process directly; others primarily reshape the relationship between parliament and citizens. Current examples range from AI-assisted transcription and automated classification of debates and parliamentary activities, to automated sequencing of votes on amendments, drafting support and admissibility checks, natural-language search of parliamentary documents, and tools intended to synthesise public sentiment around bills under discussion. These examples suggest that AI is not merely a neutral administrative upgrade. It can reshape parliamentary power and practice, particularly when adoption concentrates on a specific class of tools.
Strategic choices in AI adoption :
International cases illustrate how AI deployment may reflect strategic choices about parliament’s institutional role.
The Chilean Congress, for example, through its Caminar platform, has prioritised simplifying legislative activity by supporting the drafting of bills and amendments. By contrast, Brazil’s experience with initiatives such as Brasil Participativo has focused on strengthening popular participation, developing participatory AI solutions.
It is therefore unsurprising that the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), which represents parliaments worldwide, has recently stressed that before adopting AI tools, parliaments should clarify the institutional role they intend to play in the future, particularly in relation to deliberation and the balance between parliament and government.
The IPU outlines three possible trajectories for representative assemblies:
AI-Augmented Assembly: AI enhances human judgement while democratic primacy is preserved; AI acts as a “co-pilot” rather than replacing human decision-making.
Data-Driven Legislature: AI becomes central to decision-making, with political deliberation increasingly displaced by predominantly evidence-based processes.
Shadow Legislature: AI capabilities are concentrated within the executive branch, leaving parliaments structurally disadvantaged in managing emergencies, analysing complex dossiers and engaging citizens.
In light of the IPU’s 2025 global review of parliamentary AI applications, each parliament can assess whether its trajectory aligns with one of these models. Italy cannot be described as a “Shadowed Legislature”, as the Parliament has developed one of the highest numbers of AI tools to date. The more open question is whether Italy is moving towards an “AI-Augmented Assembly” or a “Data-Driven Legislature”.
At its current stage, Italy appears closer to the Augmented Assembly model. The internal governance framework, together with existing and planned applications, is designed to support — rather than replace — MPs’ work and decision-making. The intention is to strengthen parliamentary functions through more efficient administrative processes while preserving political responsibility.
(byEdoardo Alberto Vigano – Visiting professor at University Carlos III of MadridandPaolo Gambacciani – Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Bologna)








